Category: Politics

  • MIL-OSI China: Seminar held to build youth leadership in Lancang-Mekong region

    Source: China State Council Information Office

    A seminar on “Building Water Sector Youth Leadership Network in the Lancang-Mekong Region,” under the Lancang-Mekong Cooperation (LMC) Special Fund, was held in Beijing on Oct. 29.

    A seminar on “Building Water Sector Youth Leadership Network in the Lancang-Mekong Region” is held in Beijing on Oct. 29, 2024. [Photo by Wang Ran/China.org.cn]

    Organized by Lancang-Mekong Water Resources Cooperation Center (LMC Center), the workshop has brought together over 30 representatives from government agencies, research institutions, universities, enterprises, and NGOs to discuss project progress and share insights on developing young leaders in the water sector.

    Following the seminar, participants visited the LMC Center and the Tuancheng Lake in Beijing’s Haidian district to learn about the economic, social, and ecological impacts of the eastern and central routes of the South-North Water Diversion Project.

    “Building Water Sector Youth Leadership Network in the Lancang-Mekong Region,” was initiated by Thailand’s Office of the National Water Resources, and jointly implemented by Environmental Research Institute Chulalongkorn University, Stockholm Environment Institute (SEI) Asia Centre, and the LMC Center. It has received strong support from the Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

    Running from 2023 to 2024, it aims to strengthen youth engagement across the six countries in the Lancang-Mekong basin, fostering active participation in regional water resource cooperation.

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI China: Silk Road bonds explored at Teheran exhibition

    Source: China State Council Information Office 3

    A visitor takes a photo of an item at the exhibition, Endless Clouds of Silk Road, at the Malek National Library and Museum in Teheran, Iran, on Oct 12. [Photo/Xinhua]

    The memory and inspiration of the Silk Road, a series of ancient trade routes stretching from China to Europe, provide an attractive platform for cultural exchange between countries once connected by them.

    In one of the halls at the Malek National Library and Museum in the Iranian capital Teheran, vivid paintings were among a series of works of art that caught the attention of visitors, both Chinese and Iranian.

    Open to the public since Oct 12 and running until Nov 10, and taking the Silk Road as its theme, the exhibition, Endless Clouds of Silk Road, features a selection of Chinese art, manuscripts by renowned Chinese authors, and ancient coins used to trade along the routes, and celebrates the cultural exchange between China and Iran.

    “The exhibition is very interesting as it features the fusion of Chinese and Iranian cultures and their impact on each other,” says one visitor, Shaqayeq Evaz-Zadeh.

    “The Iranian and Chinese people have had very good relations for a very long time, and share many cultural similarities,” continues Evaz-Zadeh, who is a film and theater director.

    She mentions that there are many commonalities between Iranian and Chinese poetry and traditions, indicating time-honored, people-to-people and cultural exchanges between the two countries.

    The works on display demonstrate the trade relations between the two countries along the Silk Road, which helped bring both peoples closer, she adds. “Visiting the exhibition gave me a very good feeling, as I was able to see the closeness between the two cultures again.”

    Evaz-Zadeh also says she felt the amicable atmosphere at the exhibition, and saw Iranian and Chinese visitors chatting happily with one another.

    “Throughout history, Iran and China and their people have always had transactions, interactions and relations with each other,” says Masoud Nikqalb, another visitor, adding that the work on display makes a feature of traditional styles and simplicity. ” (This) is very interesting and makes them more tangible to visitors.”

    Nikqalb, a cinema and theater actor, says people from both countries share cultural commonalities, particularly valuing the family and respecting the elderly. “The art displayed at this exhibition gave me a sense of cultural proximity, as they conveyed concepts shared between the two peoples.”

    Jebrael Nokandeh, director of Iran’s National Library and Museum, says the exhibition shows great potential for cooperation between the two countries’ museums, voicing confidence that the event would help increase mutual understanding.

    He speaks highly of Chinese museums for their “very high” standards and “cooperation with counterparts across the world”, including the National Museum of Iran.

    Nokandeh says that Iran organized an exhibition, The Glory of the Ancient Persia, at Beijing’s Palace Museum in January, and also at the Shanghai Museum in June.

    He called for expanding the “very good” cultural cooperation between Iran and China to further strengthen the bond between their peoples.

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI Australia: $12.5 million funding to continue building stronger animal welfare enforcement across NSW

    Source: New South Wales Government 2

    Headline: $12.5 million funding to continue building stronger animal welfare enforcement across NSW

    Published: 4 November 2024

    Released by: Minister for Agriculture


    The Minns Labor Government today announced two of the state’s key animal welfare organisations, the Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals NSW (RSPCA) and the Animal Welfare League NSW (AWL), will receive $12.5 million towards their enforcement and compliance activities that provide protection for NSW cats, dogs, livestock and other animals.

    The funding is part of the NSW Government’s election commitments to establish a modern, fit for purpose animal welfare framework.

    As part of the enforcement grants announced today, the RSPCA NSW will receive $11.3 million, and the AWL NSW will receive $1.17 million.

    The funding is substantially higher than any other state or territory has allocated to charitable animal welfare organisations to undertake their compliance and enforcement work.

    The funding will be used to:

    • Fund animal welfare inspectors who play a crucial role in enforcing NSW animal welfare laws
    • Investigate animal cruelty complaints, protecting vulnerable animals from harm or distress
    • Carry out enforcement action on those people doing animals’ harm
    • Provide a one-off upgrade to AWL operating systems for streamlined compliance data and reporting.
    • Cover vehicle operating and legal expenses.

    The announcement follows recent Government animal welfare initiatives including introducing new ‘fit and proper’ laws preventing people who have been convicted of repeat animal cruelty offences from keeping or breeding animals and introducing into Parliament last month a Bill to ban the appalling practice of puppy farming.

    The grant applications and subsequent funding was assessed in accordance the requirements under the NSW Grants Administration Guide and was overseen by an independent panel.

    The purpose of these enforcement grants is to support approved charitable organisations and carry out Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Act 1979 enforcement and compliance activities for the current 2024/25 financial year.

    Minister for Agriculture Tara Moriarty said:

    “The NSW Government is committed to improving animal welfare standards across our state.

    “We will continue to work with stakeholder, advocates, and the community to improve animal welfare and to build a better and stronger framework of animal protection.

    “We recognise the compliance work the Animal Welfare League and RSPCA do and value the long-standing relationships we have with them to achieve better outcomes for the animals of NSW.

    MIL OSI News

  • MIL-Evening Report: US presidential election remains a toss-up, and a guide to US election day in Australia

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Adrian Beaumont, Election Analyst (Psephologist) at The Conversation; and Honorary Associate, School of Mathematics and Statistics, The University of Melbourne

    The United States presidential election will be held Tuesday, with results coming in from Wednesday morning AEDT. I have a guide to Wednesday below that includes when polls in the key states close and other information.

    In analyst Nate Silver’s aggregate of national polls, Democrat Kamala Harris leads Republican Donald Trump by 48.5–47.8, a gain for Trump since last Thursday, when Harris led by 48.6–47.5. Harris’ national lead peaked on October 2, when she led by 49.4–45.9.

    The US president isn’t elected by the national popular vote, but by the Electoral College, in which each state receives electoral votes equal to its federal House seats (population based) and senators (always two). Almost all states award their electoral votes as winner-takes-all, and it takes 270 electoral votes to win (out of 538 total).

    Relative to the national popular vote, the Electoral College is biased to Trump, with Harris needing at least a two-point popular vote win to be the narrow Electoral College favourite in Silver’s model.

    Trump leads by 0.4 points in both Pennsylvania (19 electoral votes) and Nevada (six). He leads by over one point in North Carolina (16) and Georgia (16), and by 2.6 points in Arizona (11). Harris leads by about one point in Michigan (16) and Wisconsin (ten).

    If the current polls are exactly right, Trump wins the Electoral College by 287–251. But either Harris or Trump could outperform their polls and win easily.

    In Silver’s model, Trump has a 53% chance to win the Electoral College, slightly down from 54% on Thursday. There’s a 28% chance that Harris wins the popular vote but loses the Electoral College. The FiveThirtyEight forecast gives Trump a 53% win probability.

    Silver is aggregating state polls to produce a popular vote forecast, and this gives Harris a 50.4–48.4 popular vote margin, better for Harris than her 0.7-point lead in national polls.

    Silver said the US pollsters are “herding”, particularly in the key states. This means individual polls are not showing enough variation in their results. If the polls are wrong in these states, herding would be a cause.

    The highly rated Selzer poll had a shock result, giving Harris a three-point lead in Iowa (six electoral votes), a state Trump won by eight points in 2020. However, an Emerson Iowa poll gave Trump a nine-point lead. At least Selzer isn’t herding!

    If Harris loses, a big cause will be the unpopularity of Joe Biden. If Trump loses, I believe his biggest mistake will be agreeing to the June 27 debate with Biden. Biden’s woeful performance persuaded senior Democrats to pressure him into withdrawing.

    Early voting and economic data

    As at Friday, over 70 million Americans had voted early (44% of total 2020 turnout). Many states give data on their early vote, such as the gender composition or the party registration of voters in states that have registration by party. But Silver said on Thursday
    that analysts shouldn’t use early vote data as an alternative to the polls.

    Many people will vote on election day, so the composition of the current early vote may be a skewed representation of the final electorate. Also, we don’t know who early voters voted for. Even in states with party registration, people can register as Other, and Other voters make up a large share of the vote.

    In economic data, US GDP increased 2.7% at an annualised rate in the September quarter (0.7% in quarter on quarter terms). GDP has increased modestly in every quarter since September 2022. In September, the personal savings rate dropped 0.2% since August to 4.6%.

    Just 12,000 jobs were added in October. While the unemployment rate remained unchanged from September at 4.1%, the employment population ratio (the share of eligible Americans employed) dropped 0.2% to 60.0%. The survey fieldwork may have been affected by Hurricane Milton.

    The Silver economic index is at +0.19, indicating an economy just above average. The economy is a key reason why Trump could win.

    Election day guide for Wednesday AEDT

    All times in this section are Wednesday AEDT. US media will often call uncompetitive states for a candidate once all polls in that state are closed, without any votes being counted. Some states are split across time zones, and in this case the part in the western time zone will close an hour after the eastern zone part.

    Early and postal votes are expected to lean to Harris, while election day votes are expected to lean to Trump. So if the early vote is counted first, the state is likely to appear better for Harris than the final result, and the reverse if the election day vote is counted first.

    The Green Papers has a complete list of poll closing times and FiveThirtyEight has details on how each state counts its votes. I will concentrate on the seven key states.

    At 10am, the first polls close in the eastern time zones of Kentucky and Indiana. These states are both expected to be Trump blowout wins.

    At 11am, polls close in Georgia. Early votes will be reported by 12pm, followed by the election day vote. Initial results will probably skew to Harris.

    At 11:30am, polls close in North Carolina. The early vote will be counted first, so the initial results are likely to be relatively good for Harris.

    At 12pm, polls close in Pennsylvania and the large majority of Michigan. Pennsylvania will count their election day votes first, which should be relatively good for Trump. Michigan will count its postal votes with election day votes.

    At 1pm, polls close in Wisconsin, Arizona and the remaining small part of Michigan. In Wisconsin, election day votes will be counted first, with postals not released until late. An hour after polls close, Arizona will release its early vote, which should be relatively good for Harris. Counting of election day votes will continue until the evening AEDT, with more counting in the following days.

    At 2pm, polls close in Nevada. The early vote will be counted first. Results can’t be reported until all voters in line have voted, which will probably be hours after the official close of polls. There will also be late postals to count.

    At 3pm, polls close in the Pacific states of California (54 electoral votes), Washington (12) and Oregon (eight), all expected to be easy wins for Harris. If Harris is doing unexpectedly well in the key states, these three may put her over the 270 electoral votes needed to win.

    At 5pm, the final polls close in Alaska’s western time zone.

    We may know who has won the Electoral College and therefore the presidency by Wednesday afternoon, but counting will continue until well into that evening AEDT. If it’s close, it may take a few more days to resolve the Electoral College.

    Some states, including the populous Democratic strongholds of California and New York, take weeks to count all their votes. So it won’t be until early December that we know the national popular vote totals.

    Adrian Beaumont does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

    ref. US presidential election remains a toss-up, and a guide to US election day in Australia – https://theconversation.com/us-presidential-election-remains-a-toss-up-and-a-guide-to-us-election-day-in-australia-242697

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Health – Blood Cancer Patients urge the Government not to forgot them, in an open letter

    Source: Leukaemia and Blood Cancer New Zealand
    Patients Sign Open Letter Urging Prime Minister to Honour Promises on Blood Cancer Medicine Funding
    More than six hundred patients from across New Zealand have signed an open letter, sent to the Prime Minister’s office yesterday afternoon, calling for action on pre-election commitments to fund cancer medicines.
    The letter, penned by blood cancer patient Elvin Tibbs, expresses a growing frustration over unfulfilled promises to address the disparities in medicine access between New Zealand and Australia, referencing the Understanding Blood Cancer Medicine Availability in Aotearoa report recently released by the Cancer Control Agency.
    In his role as National’s health spokesperson, Shane Reti stood beside Chris Luxon when announcing their pre-election cancer medicines policy and assured blood cancer patients that they would not be overlooked in efforts to improve access to modern medicines. “We understand, we haven’t forgotten you… we just need that piece of work to be done by the Cancer Control Agency.”
    With the report released, the Health Minister and Prime Minister are yet to explain how they will deliver on their commitments. The open letter asks for immediate action.
    “This report brings to light the harsh reality that life-saving blood cancer medicines remain unfunded in New Zealand while readily available to patients in comparable countries. For those of us with blood cancers, medicines present our best opportunity for survival, underscoring the devastating impact of this disparity. With the report’s findings now public, we implore you to act immediately to bridge this gap and fulfil the commitments you made to our community.”
    The report reveals that many treatments considered standard elsewhere in the world are inaccessible to Kiwis due to underfunding of Pharmac by successive governments. This leaves blood cancer patients in New Zealand with limited options to extend their survival. The co-signed letter highlights that “Every day without access to medicines is a day that brings preventable suffering and reduced quality of life.”
    The letter closes with an appeal to the Prime Minister: “We are simply asking you to deliver on your commitments; for the same chance at life that patients in comparable countries already receive.”
    The letter: The open letter was published online on 31 October and has since gathered over 600 signatures, with new support continuing to roll in. The letter can be viewed at: https://www.bcam.org.nz/openletter.
    Understanding Blood Cancer Medicine Availability in Aotearoa report
    On 24 October, the Cancer Control Agency released a report identifying 24 blood cancer medicines that are funded in Australia but not in New Zealand. These treatments are clinically significant options that Kiwis with blood cancer urgently need to ensure they have the same chances at life as their Australian counterparts. Six medicines that significantly improve survival and quality of life for patients are either on Pharmac’s funding waiting list or are in the assessment process.
    Impact on Blood Cancer Patients
    Blood cancer patients face unique challenges, as there are no prevention or screening options available to them. Their survival relies heavily on timely access to effective treatments, such as those outlined in the Cancer Control Agency’s report. Blood cancer is the third leading cause of cancer-related death in New Zealand, with more than 21,000 New Zealanders currently living with a blood cancer diagnosis.

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Members to address global issues and examine parliamentary democracy at 67th Commonwealth Parliamentary Conference

    Source: New Zealand Parliament

    Media Release
    1 November 2024

    Members of Parliament will be discussing the course for resilient democracy at the 67th Commonwealth Parliamentary Conference (CPC) hosted by the Parliament of New South Wales and the Commonwealth Parliamentary Association (CPA) New South Wales Branch this week.

    Led by Hon Carmel Sepuloni (CPA Executive Committee member), Hon Willie Jackson, Dana Kirkpatrick, Dr Lawrence Xu-Nan, and Clerk of the House Dr David Wilson will be attending from 3 – 8 November.

    The Commonwealth Parliamentary Conference is an opportunity for Commonwealth Parliaments from around the world to come together to address the critical issues facing today’s Parliaments. The flagship event will bring together over 700 Parliamentarians, parliamentary staff and decision makers for this unique conference.

    The main theme for the conference is ‘Engage, Empower, Sustain: Charting the Course for Resilient Democracy’. The conference will explore a wide range of workshop topics from the use of artificial intelligence and technology; the security of MPs; ending human trafficking; combatting discrimination legislation; supporting LGBT+ and people with disabilities to participate in Parliaments; to engaging with indigenous peoples.

    During the 67th Commonwealth Parliamentary Conference, there will also be a number of additional conferences and meetings including: 40th CPA Small Branches Conference; 8th Commonwealth Women Parliamentarians (CWP) Conference; meetings of the Commonwealth Parliamentarians with Disabilities (CPwD) network; the CPA General Assembly and meetings of the CPA Executive Committee; and the 58th Society of Clerks at the Table (SOCATT) meetings.

    ENDS

    The 67th Commonwealth Parliamentary Conference (CPC), is taking place from 3 – 8 November in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.

    The Commonwealth Parliamentary Conference is the annual conference of the Commonwealth Parliamentary Association (CPA). Information about the 67th Commonwealth Parliamentary Conference (CPC) can be found at the CPA website www.cpahq.org/67-cpc.

    The Commonwealth Parliamentary Association (CPA) exists to develop, promote and support Parliamentarians and their staff to identify benchmarks of good governance and to implement the enduring values of the Commonwealth. The CPA is an international community of almost 180 Commonwealth Parliaments and Legislatures working together to deepen the Commonwealth’s commitment to the highest standards of democratic governance. For more information visit www.cpahq.org.

    Please contact communications.team@parliament.govt.nz for any media queries.

    MIL OSI

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI Economics: New Development Bank prices USD 1.25 billion Green Bond under EMTN Programme

    Source: New Development Bank

    NOT FOR RELEASE, PUBLICATION OR DISTRIBUTION IN OR INTO, OR TO ANY PERSON LOCATED OR RESIDENT IN, THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA OR TO ANY U.S. PERSON (AS DEFINED IN REGULATION S OF THE UNITED STATES SECURITIES ACT OF 1933) OR IN OR INTO ANY OTHER JURISDICTION WHERE IT IS UNLAWFUL TO RELEASE, PUBLISH OR DISTRIBUTE THIS ANNOUNCEMENT.

    On October 31, 2024, the New Development Bank (NDB) successfully priced a 3-Year USD 1.25 billion Green Bond, paying an annual coupon of 4.677 per cent (equivalent to SOFR MS + 80 bps), under its Euro Medium Term Note Programme, which will be issued on 7 November 2024, subject to final legal documentation and customary closing conditions.

    An amount equal to the net proceeds from the Bond issuance will be allocated to finance and/or refinance, in whole or in part, past or future disbursement of loans made to eligible green projects in accordance with NDB’s Sustainable Financing Policy Framework dated 25 May 2020 in such sectors as clean transportation, climate change adaptation, energy efficiency, low-carbon and renewable energy, sustainable water management, etc. NDB’s Sustainable Financing Policy Framework governs issuances of green, social and sustainability debt instruments, including the use and management of bond proceeds, project selection and evaluation process, reporting and disclosure.

    The USD 1.25 billion Green Bond received strong demand from investors, with the final order book exceeding USD 2.2 billion. Geographically, the issuance attracted a diverse investor base, with 66% of investors from Asia and 34% from the EMEA region. The composition of the final order book was as follows: Central Banks, Official Institutions, and Sovereign Wealth Funds – 52%; Banks – 43%; Asset Managers, Fund Managers, and others – 5%.

    Bank of China, Emirates NBD Capital, First Abu Dhabi Bank, ICBC, and Standard Chartered Bank (B&D) acted as Joint Lead Managers of the transaction. CITIC Securities served as a Co-Manager of the transaction.

    “The strong demand and good pricing conditions obtained underscore the confidence of investors in NDB’s financial stability and its mandate of mobilizing resources for infrastructure and sustainable development projects in BRICS and other emerging economies and developing countries,” said Mr. Monale Ratsoma, NDB Vice-President and Chief Financial Officer.

    “New Development Bank is committed to being a regular issuer in both hard currency and local currencies of its member countries. Our issuances are guided by market conditions, investor demand and the requirements of the Bank’s lending portfolio. NDB aims to build a liquid benchmark curve over time with issuances across different maturities, enhancing its capacity to finance infrastructure and sustainable development projects in BRICS and other emerging economies and developing countries”.

    Background Information

    New Development Bank was established with the purpose of mobilizing resources for infrastructure and sustainable development projects in BRICS and other emerging market economies and developing countries, complementing the efforts of multilateral and regional financial institutions for global growth and development. In 2021, NDB initiated membership expansion and admitted Bangladesh, Egypt, United Arab Emirates and Uruguay as its new member countries.

    In December 2019, NDB established its inaugural USD 50 billion Euro Medium Term Note Programme (EMTN Programme) in the international capital markets.

    IMPORTANT DISCLAIMER: This announcement does not constitute or form part of an offer to sell or the solicitation of an offer to sell or subscribe for or otherwise acquire any securities (including, without limitation, the green bonds mentioned above (the “Bonds“)).

    This announcement is not a prospectus for the purposes of Regulation (EU) 2017/1129 or that Regulation as it forms part of United Kingdom law.

    The Bonds are not being, and will not be, offered or sold in the United States. Nothing in this announcement constitutes an offer to sell or the solicitation of an offer to buy the Bonds in the United States or any other jurisdiction. Securities may not be offered, sold or delivered in the United States absent registration under, or an exemption from the registration requirements of, the Securities Act. The Bonds have not been, and will not be, registered under the Securities Act or the securities laws of any state or other jurisdiction of the United States and may not be offered, sold or delivered, directly or indirectly, within the United States or to, or for the account or benefit of, U.S. persons (as defined in Regulation S under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended).

    No action has been or will be taken in any jurisdiction in relation to the Bonds to permit a public offering of securities.

    This announcement is directed only at (i) persons who are outside the United Kingdom (the “UK“), or (ii) persons who are in the UK who are (a) persons who have professional experience in matters relating to investments falling within Article 19(5) of the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 (Financial Promotion) Order 2005 (the “Order“) or (b) otherwise, persons to whom this announcement may lawfully be communicated pursuant to the Order (all such persons together being referred to as “relevant persons“). This announcement is directed only at relevant persons and must not be acted on or relied on by persons who are not relevant persons. Any investment or investment activity to which this announcement relates is available only to relevant persons and will be engaged in only with relevant persons. This electronic transmission may only be communicated to persons in the UK in circumstances where section 21(1) of the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 does not apply to the Issuer.

    Credit ratings should not be taken as recommendations by a rating agency to buy, sell or hold the Bonds. They may be revised, suspended or withdrawn at any time by the relevant rating agency.

    Prohibition on sales to EEA and UK retail investors: Target Market (MiFID II / UK MiFIR) is Eligible Counterparties and Professional clients only (all distribution channels). No EU PRIIPs or UK PRIIPs key information document (KID) has been prepared as the Notes are not available to retail in EEA or the UK.

    Relevant stabilisation regulations including FCA/ICMA will apply.

    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-Evening Report: Will it be Kamala Harris or Donald Trump? Here’s what each needs to win the US election

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Bruce Wolpe, Non-resident Senior Fellow, United States Study Centre, University of Sydney

    On election eve in the United States, the presidential race is deadlocked. The polls are exceptionally close across the country and in all the swing states – Pennsylvania, Michigan, Wisconsin in the industrial midwest; Nevada and Arizona in the west; and Georgia and North Carolina in the south.

    The final New York Times/Siena poll shows Democratic Vice President Kamala Harris leading by a very small margin or tied with Republican former President Donald Trump in all the swing states. The exception is Arizona, where Trump leads by a few percentage points.

    While there is no clear favourite to win, there are several critical factors that will driving voters’ decisions on Election Day. This is what to watch.




    Read more:
    Politics with Michelle Grattan: Bruce Wolpe says personal relations between Trump and Albanese would be ‘rocky’


    Republicans turning against Trump

    Trump’s favourability is stuck around 43% in nationwide polling. In the past two presidential elections, he fell short of taking 50% of the national popular vote. As president, he never achieved over 50% favourability. And he has never topped 50% since leaving office.

    This means he has hit a ceiling in his support and is highly unlikely to win the national popular vote on Tuesday.

    This also reflects what happened to Trump in the Republican primaries to win the nomination. He dominated the field, defeating Florida Governor Ron DeSantis, former UN Ambassador Nikki Haley, and several others. But in most of those primaries, 15-20% of Republican voters did not vote for Trump.

    Where will these Republican voters ultimately land on Tuesday? Probably half want to vote Republican and will go with Trump. Others will not being able to bring themselves to vote for Harris and will simply not vote for president.

    Others will switch their support to Harris. Indeed, there has never been such a swelling of support from members of one party to support the other party’s presidential candidate.

    Harris needs those “Republicans for Harris” votes. In addition, she’ll need to replicate the coalition of young voters, voters of colour and women who backed current President Joe Biden against Trump in 2020 in those same swing states and nationally.

    Her favourability ratings are higher than Trump, at around 46%. The closer a presidential candidate is to 50% approval ratings, the better their chance of winning the election.

    It’s the economy, stupid

    At the same time, the country is in a bad mood. There is a classic polling question asked at elections: is the country on the right track, or moving in the wrong direction? Between 60–70% of Americans believe the country is on the wrong track.

    That is a signal this election is about change. Historically, that sentiment has not favoured the incumbent in the White House. As Biden’s vice president, Harris is directly facing this headwind.

    There are four key issues in this election. The most important is the hip pocket issue: household budgets, cost of living pressures and voters’ concerns about their future economic security.

    Since Biden and Harris took office nearly four years ago, the cost of groceries, household items, utilities and services such as insurance have risen between 10–40%. Petrol prices have gone up even more.

    Though interest rates have fallen, American households are hurting. When asked who is best to manage the economy, voters in swing states say Trump by a 15-point margin.

    The next-biggest issue is immigration. Since Trump first became a presidential candidate in 2015, he has relentlessly pushed the immigration button, declaring the border with Mexico is out of control, with crime and pillage rising in its wake.

    The first three years of Biden’s term were also marked by big surges of immigrants crossing the border, though rates have fallen dramatically in 2024.

    Voters view Trump as best placed to manage this issue, too, by nearly 15 points.

    So, Trump is seen as a more effective leader on the two most important policy issues in this election.

    A surge in support from women

    Abortion rights and reproductive health services are the third major issue. Many women across America are repelled by the Supreme Court’s decision to take away their long-held constitutional right to an abortion. Now, this policy is decided at the state level. And several conservative Republican states – including Ohio and Kansas – have voted to restore abortion rights.

    Harris is seen as the champion of these issues. Multiple polls show voters trust her more than Trump on reproductive rights, by wide margins.

    As a result, polling shows Harris is leading Trump with women voters in the swing states, by 15 points or more.

    Abortion rights are also on the ballot in two swing states, Nevada and Arizona, which should help Harris in both.

    The future of American democracy is the fourth major issue facing voters. According to a new poll, half the country sees Trump as a profound threat to America’s democracy who will wield authoritarian power to enforce his policies and programs.

    Harris has pledged to turn the page, heal divisions and get Republicans and Democrats working together again.

    In these closing days, Trump continues to make provocative statements with violent imagery. At a rally in Arizona last week, for instance, he again attacked Liz Cheney, the former Republican congresswoman who advocated for the prosecution of Trump over the January 6 insurrection:

    She’s a radical war hawk. Let’s put her with a rifle standing there with nine barrels shooting at her, OK? Let’s see how she feels about it. You know, when the guns are trained on her face.

    This may have provided Harris with a final cut-through moment on Trump’s fitness for office in the final days of the campaign. She said in response:

    Anyone who wants to be president of the United States who uses that kind of violent rhetoric is clearly disqualified and unqualified to be president. […] Trump is increasingly, however, someone who considers his political opponents the enemy, is permanently out for revenge and is increasingly unstable and unhinged.

    So, who is going to win?

    Trump’s team sees victory in all the polls. His chief pollster wrote late last week:

    President Trump’s position nationally and in every single battleground state is significantly better than it was four years ago.

    The polls may also be undercounting the full measure of Trump’s support, as was the case in 2016 and 2020. And the polls may not be reflecting the extent of antipathy towards Harris as a Black and south Asian woman.

    Jen O’Malley Dillon, Harris’ campaign director, and who headed the 2020 Biden campaign that defeated Trump, has told her troops, meanwhile, that undecided voters are “gettable”, adding:

    We have multiple pathways to victory […] Our folks are voting at levels we need them to vote in order for us to win.

    Harris has built a US$1 billion (A$1.5 billion) machine designed to reach voters in the swing states – through personal contact. This machine made three million phone calls and door knocks on homes in Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin alone on Saturday. If this machine delivers, it could be the boost Harris needs on election night.

    Harris’ campaign also signalled over the weekend that late-deciding voters, and especially women, are breaking their way by double digits. There is a sense among Democrats that Harris is now peaking as the campaign concludes.

    The final analysis

    If Harris wins, it will be because she has successfully sealed the deal with those voters and made the election a referendum on Trump – that on balance the country has had enough of him after eight years. It also means her ground game delivered the votes.

    If Trump wins, it will mean voters trusted him to manage inflation and the cost-of-living squeeze on households, as well as what they see as out-of-control immigration and crime. These messages would also have been further embellished by unease about Harris, a Black and south Asian woman, as president.

    Bruce Wolpe receives funding from the United States Studies Centre at the University of Sydney. He also worked on the Democratic staff of the US House of Representatives, most recently during President Barack Obama’s first term.

    ref. Will it be Kamala Harris or Donald Trump? Here’s what each needs to win the US election – https://theconversation.com/will-it-be-kamala-harris-or-donald-trump-heres-what-each-needs-to-win-the-us-election-242756

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-OSI China: Writing the village as universe

    Source: China State Council Information Office 3

    Wei Sixiao has won the 2024 Blancpain-Imaginist Literary Prize for his novel Tu Guang Cun Mu (Vast land, Small Tree), beating other four shortlisted writers.

    Cofounded in 2018 by Swiss luxury watch brand Blancpain and Chinese publisher Imaginist, the annual prize was established to shed light on Chinese writers under 45. The winner receives a cash prize of 300,000 yuan ($42,022), and a Blancpain watch.

    The theme of this year’s award was “Where is the originality in literature?” According to Leung Man-tao, chief consultant of Imaginist, with the theme, the award chose to inspire people to explore the experiences and creativity that define us as individuals, especially in the context of being surrounded by the cocoon of information, big data, and artificial intelligence.

    The evaluation committee, which is composed each year of different writers, literary critics, and a celebrity reader from another field, consisted of poet and literary critic Zhang Dinghao, actor-director Joan Chen, writer Shuang Xuetao, who won the award in 2020, Xu Zidong, former director of Department of Chinese at Lingnan University, and writer Luo Yijun.

    Representing the jury, Xu delivered the award speech for the 38-year-old’s winning entry. “Focusing on a village, rather than a single character or event, the book makes use of meticulous realism to carry on the tradition of Sheng Si Chang (The Field of Life and Death, by Xiao Hong).

    “It deepens and develops the mainstream of Chinese rural literature in terms of space. In terms of time, it not only narrates the lives of farmers over the past few decades, as seen in Huo Zhe (To Live, by Yu Hua) and Pingfan De Shijie (Ordinary World, by Lu Yao), but also keeps pace with the times by depicting new rural scenes: tractors harvesting corn, farmers using social media, township elections and nursing homes.

    “Amid the changes to the countryside, it reflects on unchanging aspects, namely the network of interpersonal relationships based on kinship and family ties as described in Fei Xiaotong’s Xiangtu Zhongguo (From the Soil: The Foundations of Chinese Society).”

    However, at the prize-giving event on Oct 22 in Beijing, Zhang Dinghao raised the issue of whether Wei’s work was “repetitive”, suggesting that the structural innovation of the novel was designed to mask the repetition of content. He also raised the question of whether the writer was stuck in a habitual style, saying this was “a matter that Wei might need to reflect on”.

    In response, Wei acknowledged that his limitation was the tendency to repeat themes.

    “Some characters may recur, but it’s inevitable. After living in the countryside for over 30 years, I’ve witnessed the gradual development of many characters each year. So, I want to write coherently,” he says, adding that he tries to present fresh and overlooked elements with each new novel he writes.

    Born in a village in Zibo, Shandong province in 1986, Wei focuses on the village as his subject.

    His recent titles include The Rural Trilogy — Yu Shi Wu Qu (which roughly translates as “don’t do other things than suggested by traditional Chinese almanacs”), Doushi Renmin Qunzhong (The Masses), and Wang Nenghao (the name of the principal character), which was shortlisted for the 2022 Blancpain-Imaginist Literary Prize.

    After Wang Nenghao, Wei was searching for a new way to write another novel about the village. He says that after the trilogy, there were still a great many things in Xinliu village that he had not written about previously.

    “Even if it’s a small village with only a few hundred households, it’s a very complex little universe, which motivates me to continue writing about it,” he says.

    In the end, he found the answer, to “dissect” the little-known village from different perspectives, as the title of his book indicates.

    “The idea (for the title) is actually quite simple: to deconstruct the two Chinese characters for ‘village’ into four parts, and see how they could be rearranged to sound smoother. I chose this title as the novel seeks to describe different aspects of a village,” Wei says.

    Wanting to break free from the constraints of the traditional novel, Wei made bold structural changes in his latest work.

    The novel is divided into two parts. The first part, Aspects, places specific focus on some of the people, things and places in the village, revealing both the genealogies of characters in Xinliu, and the vicissitudes of life.

    The second part, A Year, takes a nonfictional approach to documenting the events, large and small, such as agricultural work, weddings and funerals, providing a panoramic depiction of the authentic rural landscape of the present.

    In the second part, Wei introduces his own perspective, leading readers through significant events in rural life.

    “It was a bit like making a documentary,” he says.

    Inspired by the writing style of German-English novelist, essayist, poet and scholar W.G. Sebald, which combines elements of memoir, fiction, history and biography, in Tu Guang Cun Mu, Wei explores a style that blurs the boundary between fiction and nonfiction.

    Like scenes from a documentary, the multitude of living beings and everyday life in Xinliu village unfold gradually in the 400-page novel. Over 100 characters, through different festivals and seasons, experience birth, aging, sickness, and death, joy and sorrow, separations and reunions — behind each face is an endless story.

    “Villages may seem similar to one another, and you don’t know how the villagers survive and live. Perhaps after reading my novel, readers may understand how they live and die, which might have been my original intention in writing,” Wei says.

    “The work is vivid and powerful. Wei Sixiao possesses a deep understanding and affection for the land, yet he avoids sentimentality, using the most simple, compassionate and humorous tone to accurately depict the lives of the villagers,” says Joan Chen, commenting on the book.

    “This allows us to feel intense, indescribable emotion and sentiment, reflecting the era and society through a tapestry of lives. I particularly enjoy the dialogues between the first-person narrator ‘I’ and the mother in the book, where they exchange all sorts of gossip about the city, the village, relatives and acquaintances, that bring a smile to the reader’s face.”

    Death is one of the topics Wei often covers in his work, especially rural funerals, which he says are like a festival gathering, attended by a lot of relatives and friends.

    “When faced with death, people often experience poetic moments. My view of funerals has changed over the years. I used to dislike insincerity of the wailing, but now I see it can comfort the deceased person’s close family, even if the tears aren’t real.”

    Opened for entries on April 15, the 2024 Blancpain-Imaginist Literary Prize received 115 works of fiction, a record number of submissions, says Liu Ruilin, founder of Imaginist. Five, including Tong Mo’s novel Dadi Zhongxin De Ren (People at the Center of the Earth), short story collection Guowang De Youxi (The King’s Game) by Datouma, and Laoshi Haoren (Honest, Good People) by Gu Xiang were shortlisted, with the five judges commenting that they “demonstrate the young writers’ keen insight into reality and an impressively expansive view”.

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI Translation: A trip to Samoa around key sectors for New Caledonia

    MIL OSI Translation. French Polynesian to English –

    Source: Government of New Caledonia

    Mickaël Forrest, member of the government responsible for sport and international tourism promotion, travelled to Apia (Samoa) to take part in the Pacific sports ministers meeting on 30 October, as well as the first forum of the World Anti-Doping Agency for Oceania sports ministers. He took advantage of this trip to meet with the Samoan ministry responsible for tourism. This was an opportunity to discuss partnership options between New Caledonia and Samoa.

    Pacific Sports Ministerial Meeting

    The Pacific Sports Ministers’ Meeting, held in Apia on 30 October, provided an opportunity to discuss issues of common interest to countries and territories in the region, such as hosting the Pacific Games, the contribution of sport to national priorities and the need to coordinate and create a regional strategic plan in due course.

    The sports ministers also had the opportunity to share the projects undertaken in their respective countries. A secretariat was decided to ensure better coordination between the policies developed in the islands but also for better operational efficiency in connection with the national Olympic committees.

    As part of this ministerial, Mickaël Forrest, member of the government responsible for sport, also participated in the first forum of the World Anti-Doping Agency for Oceania sports ministers which took place the day before.

     

     

    The primary objective of this meeting was to hear the concerns and challenges of the Oceania region while benefiting from a new dynamic around the fight against doping. The needs and aspirations of the region were highlighted during this ministerial in order to foster greater support and a better understanding of these needs.

    Contact with Samoa’s Prime Minister for Tourism

    The member of the government responsible for the international promotion of tourism and president of New Caledonia Tourism took the opportunity of this trip to meet Samoa Tourism this Wednesday, October 30.

     

    The representatives discussed possible partnerships between New Caledonia and Samoa in terms of tourism promotion, which could be made official at the beginning of 2025.

    These meetings are part of the guidelines set by the safeguard, reconstruction and rebuilding plan (S2R), of which the strengthening of regional cooperation is one of the measures recommended in the overhaul of the Caledonian economic model, and which also coincide with the strategic objectives of the plan for a Blue Pacific 2050.

    EDITOR’S NOTE: This article is a translation. Apologies should the grammar and/or sentence structure not be perfect.

    MIL Translation OSI

  • MIL-Evening Report: Dams have taken half the water from Australia’s second biggest river – and climate change will make it even worse

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Jan Kreibich, PhD Candidate, Centre for Ecosystem Science & Water Research Laboratory, UNSW Sydney

    Annette Ruzicka

    The largest wetland on Australia’s second longest river, the Murrumbidgee in the southern Murray-Darling Basin, is drying up. This is bad news for the plants, animals and people who rely on the vast Lowbidgee Floodplain. So it’s important to understand what is going on, and whether we can do anything about it.

    Our new research used computer modelling to study past and future river flows. We examined natural flows in the lower Murrumbidgee River between 1890 and 1927, before humans started changing the river. We compared these flows to what happened after big dams went in and more water was taken out for irrigation. Then, we modelled how climate change is likely to influence flows in future.

    We found river regulation such as dams and reservoirs cut flows in half over the past three decades. It means periods between life-giving floods on the wetlands are now more than twice as long. With climate change, drying of these vital freshwater ecosystems is likely to accelerate.

    Altogether, we predict the annual duration of flood events sustaining these wetlands will drop by as much as 85% by 2075 compared to natural levels, if nothing is done. But there are plenty of things we can do to turn this around, because our research shows the main reason for the decline is river regulation and overextraction.

    A colony of Australian pelicans gathered on the Lowbidgee Floodplain.
    Annette Ruzicka

    Floods are essential for wetlands

    The Lowbidgee Floodplain, in southwestern New South Wales, supports expansive river red gum and black box forests as well as one of the state’s largest lignum shrublands. Lignum’s thick mass of stems forms bushes that make great nesting platforms for waterbirds, attracting thousands of glossy ibis, straw-necked ibis and royal spoonbills. The area is also a breeding ground for Australian pelicans.

    The endangered Southern bell frog and threatened native fish such as Murray cod also live here.

    Floods bring wetlands to life. But human activities have disrupted the natural cycle of flood and drought. In the Murrumbidgee, 26 big dams and reservoirs now store and divert water, mainly for irrigation. These interventions have more than doubled the time between floods, causing large sections of the wetlands to dry up.

    The lack of floods has devastated the floodplain, causing black box and river red gum forests to die. Waterbird numbers also plummeted.

    A clip from the aerial waterbird survey of Pollen Creek on the Lowbidgee (Centre for Ecosystem Science)

    The Lowbidgee’s cultural significance

    The Nari Nari people have lived on the Lowbidgee Floodplain for tens of thousands of years. The land and water has deep cultural and spiritual value.

    Evidence of Nari Nari connection to this place is seen in the scar trees cut for canoes and other wooden items, middens of discarded shell and bone, earth mounds and burial sites scattered across the landscape.

    After 180 years of dispossession, 880 square kilometres of the floodplain was returned to the Nari Nari Tribal Council in 2019. This allows the original peoples of this land to repair it, reinstating cultural burning for example. But there’s a limit to how much they can do without more water.

    Nari Nari Elders Kerrie Parker (left) and Mabel Fitzpatrick (right) in the Gayini Wetlands of the Lowbidgee Floodplain.
    Annette Ruzicka

    River regulation and climate change

    Few studies have effectively reconstructed such a long history of a river to see where we have come from, and just as importantly, assessed what lies ahead.

    We modelled natural flows in the Murrumbidgee River, using data for rainfall and runoff upstream. The rainfall data covers more than a century, from 1890 to 2018, which allowed us to model natural flows back to 1890.

    First we established a baseline for natural flows. Then we were able to work out how dams, reservoirs and and water diversions have disrupted these flows over time.

    We also considered how climate change might influence river flows in the future under different greenhouse gas emission scenarios.

    We found most of the decline (55%) in the Murrumbidgee River’s flows was due to river regulation. But climate change will probably make matters worse, shaving another 7–10% off river flows by 2075, based on average projections.

    The average annual duration of floods reaching the floodplain wetlands has dropped from 11.3 days under natural flows to just 4.5 days currently. This could decline further to around 1.7 days as the climate becomes warmer and drier.

    An aerial view of the Gayini Wetlands.
    Annette Ruzicka

    Now is the time to act

    Australia’s rivers are at risk, but it’s not too late to act. By reducing over-allocation and returning water to the environment we can protect threatened and endangered species, reduce the impacts of climate change, and honour the cultural heritage of First Nations Peoples.

    Managing water releases to mimic natural seasonal flows can also help reinstate the natural cues for native plants, animals and other organisms.

    Our research underscores the urgent need to understand our past in order to explore future water management options. It’s clear much of the damage has been done by damming the river and taking out so much water. Now it’s important to restore the balance in favour of the environment, to prepare for future climate change.

    The Murrumbidgee River and its major floodplain wetlands are also a warning – a canary in the coal mine so to speak – of what could happen to other river systems worldwide as water demand rises along with projected income and population growth. This is especially concerning for many arid and semi-arid regions, where climate change is increasing temperatures while reducing rainfall.

    We wish to acknowledge the contribution of Nari Nari Tribal man and General Manager of Gayini wetlands, Jamie Woods, to this article and the research paper it was based on.

    Jan Kreibich’s work was supported by the University of New South Wales and the Australian Research Council.

    Richard Kingsford receives funding from a range of government and non-government organisations, including the Australian Research Council, the New South Wales, Victorian, South Australian and Queensland Governments and the Australian Government. He is councillor of the Biodiversity Council and a member of the Wentworth Group of Concerned Scientists.

    ref. Dams have taken half the water from Australia’s second biggest river – and climate change will make it even worse – https://theconversation.com/dams-have-taken-half-the-water-from-australias-second-biggest-river-and-climate-change-will-make-it-even-worse-242192

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-Evening Report: Australia is axing a $7bn military satellite project, leaving defence comms potentially vulnerable

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By David Tuffley, Senior Lecturer in Applied Ethics & CyberSecurity, Griffith University

    In a significant blow to Australia’s defence capabilities, the federal government is cancelling what would have been the nation’s largest-ever space project: a A$7 billion military satellite communications system.

    The decision was confirmed in a press statement today. It comes just 18 months after the Albanese government gave the green light to the ambitious program.

    Defence industry sources quoted by The Australian newspaper indicated that insufficient funding was allocated to start the program, despite its strategic importance. According to the ABC, “defence industry figures believe there are cheaper options available”.

    The project’s cancellation would mark a dramatic reversal for a program that was meant to make Australia’s military communications safer at a time when the cyber threat landscape has been steadily evolving.

    The rise and fall of JP9102

    The ambitious satellite program is known as JP9102. It was awarded to US defence contractor Lockheed Martin in April 2023 after a competitive tender process that included major players like Airbus, Northrop Grumman and Optus.

    The project aimed to launch several large military-grade satellites. It would also involve several ground stations, new satellite communications operations centres, and a central management system. Taken together, this would create a secure communications network for Australia’s military.

    Currently, the Australian Defence Force (ADF) uses a complex network of up to 89 different “capabilities” (military assets) that rely on satellite communications.

    This existing system lacks the comprehensive security and coverage that JP9102 promised to deliver. Without it, Australia’s military communications are potentially left vulnerable to cyber and electronic warfare attacks.

    In its statement, the Department of Defence claims its “current satellite communications capabilities support the immediate needs of the organisation”.

    What can military satellites deliver?

    The proposed satellite system was intended to create what experts call an “uncrackable data network” across the ADF.

    These military-grade satellites would have provided secure communications for fighter jets, naval vessels and ground forces across the vast Indo-Pacific region.

    Unlike commercial satellites, military satellites incorporate advanced encryption and anti-jamming capabilities. This makes them significantly more resistant to cyber attack and electronic warfare.

    Military satellites face sophisticated cyber threats from both state and non-state actors.

    China and Russia are widely recognised as having advanced capabilities in this domain. They have the ability to jam satellite signals, intercept communications and potentially even take control of satellite systems. North Korea has also demonstrated growing capabilities in cyber warfare, particularly in signal jamming.

    In 2014, Russian forces reportedly jammed and disrupted satellite communications during their operations in Crimea. More recently, at the start of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022, hackers disabled thousands of satellite modems that were part of the Viasat satellite network, causing disruptions to both military and civilian communications across Europe.

    In the commercial sector, Iran has been accused of jamming satellite broadcasts and GPS signals.

    This demonstrates how even nations with less advanced military capabilities can pose significant threats to satellite communications.

    JP9102 was considered a “bleeding-edge technology project”. It included plans for machine learning capabilities to increase agility and responsiveness.

    The Australian Strategic Policy Institute has previously praised the project’s potential for making room for future technological improvements:

    The JP9102 satellites may, if they are based on open-architecture design or software-based systems, take advantage of future on-orbit servicing technologies that could extend their operational life and enhance their capabilities over time.

    A budget reality

    The key takeaway here is the growing gap between Australia’s defence ambitions and its budget reality. As regional tensions continue to increase and cyber threats evolve, the decision to cancel JP9102 highlights the challenging trade-offs between needing to secure Australia’s military communications and the costs of doing so.

    It raises the question of how Australia will secure its military communications in an increasingly contested Indo-Pacific region. The cancellation of JP9102 creates a significant capability gap in Australia’s military communications strategy that will need to be addressed.

    Defence planners will likely need to explore alternative solutions. These might include partnerships with commercial satellite providers or joining the military satellite networks of allied nations, such as the United States.

    David Tuffley does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

    ref. Australia is axing a $7bn military satellite project, leaving defence comms potentially vulnerable – https://theconversation.com/australia-is-axing-a-7bn-military-satellite-project-leaving-defence-comms-potentially-vulnerable-242761

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-OSI Australia: Grapevine guide keeps winegrowers up-to-date

    Source: New South Wales Department of Primary Industries

    4 Nov 2024

    NSW winegrowers will have the latest research and development at their fingertips following the release of the NSW Government’s latest Grapevine management guide.

    The guide is one of the NSW Department of Primary Industries and Regional Development’s flagship publications that provides NSW Wine Industry members with important information to ensure they are across current and emerging research and industry news.

    Penny Flannery, a Development Officer in Viticulture for the NSW Department of Primary Industries and Regional Development, said the yearly publication was a crucial means of providing up-to-date information to wine industry professionals across the state.

    “Essentially, this free guide is an important link between the latest developments in viticulture and the wine industry,” Ms Flannery said.

    “The annual guide has been in existence for more than 30 years, and this latest edition covers off some critical topics and important developments for winegrowers.”

    The 2024-25 Grapevine management guide includes articles on:

    • Rootlings’ Network program and the conference
    • The under-vine ground cover project
    • The resting vineyard trial
    • Scale and mealybug incidence and management in the vineyard
    • Powdery mildew and downy mildew-resistant grapevine selections
    • Red Blotch virus
    • Tocal’s vineyard emergency response training
    • Crown gall in NSW

    To find out more and download your free copy, visit the website.

    Images are available here

    Media contact
    For more information, please contact: pi.media@dpird.nsw.gov.au.

    MIL OSI News

  • MIL-Evening Report: Authentically embracing tikanga Māori can help New Zealand in the growing Asian markets

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Hafsa Ahmed, Senior lecturer, Department of Global Value Chains and Trade, Lincoln University, New Zealand

    The Asian markets have long been seen as a linchpin for New Zealand’s economic success. And the key to future growth could be the cultural similarities between Māori and communities across the Asian region.

    These shared values include mana (honour/prestige), manaakitanga (reciprocity/hospitality), karakia (prayer), whakapapa (genealogy) and veneration of kaumatua (elders).

    My ongoing research has found embracing the cultural values of tikanga Māori could give New Zealand an edge in these competitive Asian markets.

    Growth potential

    Asia was projected to drive 60% of global GDP growth in 2024, led by India and China.

    Seven of New Zealand’s top ten export destinations are in the Asian region. Exports to China alone amounted to NZ$20 billion last year. Exports to India amount to $520 million.

    Asia’s projected growth presents a unique opportunity for any country trying to increase its trade in the region. New Zealand holds a unique advantage when engaging with Asia which relates to cultural distance – the extent to which shared values and norms differ from nation to nation.

    Research has shown cultural distance is an important factor in international trade and management.

    Cultural distance is what sets a country’s culture apart, including differences in language, societal values and family structures. It’s not static, and there could be clusters within countries where diversity exists.

    European Australia, for example, is less distant to the European New Zealand than other countries due to shared colonial origins. But these British-based cultures are considered to have a greater distance from their own indigenous populations.

    Similarly, Asian countries can be considered as having a bigger cultural distance from Anglo-American cultures. Individualism, for example, is a core value of Western cultures, whereas collectivism is key in Asian cultures.

    Building connections

    My research has found there are certain shared values between Māori and Asian cultures that mean the cultural distance is less than it is with Anglo-American cultures.

    Similar to many Asian cultures, the Māori worldview is deeply rooted in the intricate relationships between humans, ancestors, and the natural world.

    This can be seen through whakapapa and mana, both intrinsically linked to one’s connection to the natural environment and human beings.

    This has similarities with spiritual practices in Asia, including Hinduism and Buddhism. The concept of bumitama in Balinese culture, for example, translates to “humanity-land-god”, reflecting a holistic view where humans are interconnected with nature and the divine.

    The Māori concept of manaakitanga – the principle of reciprocity, where an individual is recognised and respected for not just who they are but as a representative of everyone who has gone before – is an acknowledgement that individuals are all connected through their ancestors.




    Read more:
    Cultural differences impede trade for most countries — but not China


    Manaakitanga has parallels in many Asian cultures. For example, the ancient Sanskrit adage atithi devo bhava is the cornerstone of Indian hospitality.

    Kaumātua – an elder in Māori society – holds a position of immense significance. As the custodians of knowledge, tradition and spiritual wisdom, kaumātua is pivotal in guiding the community, particularly the youth.

    This approach of transmission of knowledge, values and cultural heritage from elders to younger generations is a core function of many Asian societies.

    New Zealand’s advantage

    This comparison simplifies complex cultural systems. It’s important to acknowledge that the nuances and complexities of each culture are vast and multifaceted.

    But examining shared similarities can help foster a deeper appreciation for the resonance between Māori and Asian cultures.

    The government needs to consider the cultural distance between Māori and Asian cultures as it works to promote trade with its Asian partners.

    Incorporating tikanga Māori in international policy and engagement can enable authentic relationships with Asia.

    In addition, New Zealand could further include Māori representation in diplomacy with specific Māori diplomatic roles for Asia.

    Strategies can include adopting Māori values in decision-making – such as focusing on manaakitanga and kaitiakitanga. The government needs to also support Māori businesses to enter Asian markets and encourage training focused on Asian and Māori cross-cultural exchanges that include opportunities to learn Asian languages to bolster communication.

    But this would require a thorough alignment of the New Zealand government towards Te Tiriti o Waitangi principles – a move that is unlikely with the current centre-right coalition.

    It is clear embracing tikanga Māori could provide an edge to New Zealand when it comes to engagement with Asia to foster stronger economic, trade, investment and tourism relationships.

    Hafsa Ahmed does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

    ref. Authentically embracing tikanga Māori can help New Zealand in the growing Asian markets – https://theconversation.com/authentically-embracing-tikanga-maori-can-help-new-zealand-in-the-growing-asian-markets-242005

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-OSI Australia: Interview with Melissa Clarke, Afternoon Briefing, ABC

    Source: Australian Treasurer

    MELISSA CLARKE:

    But first, a new report shows more than 1,200 companies paid no tax in the past financial year. An annual report from the Australian Taxation Office shows of the nearly 4,000 firms that lodged their returns, around 30 per cent did not pay tax. But the overall amount of corporate tax being paid to the ATO has increased by 17 per cent, which the government says is partly due to a crackdown on tax avoidance, as well as increasing profits by some companies. The Assistant Treasurer and Minister for Financial Services, Stephen Jones, joined me a short time ago. Stephen Jones, thanks for joining us. We see that corporate tax receipts are up 17 per cent under new figures the ATO have released. Is it a case of a tax avoidance crackdown working or is it just that companies are doing particularly well and recording record profits and paying more tax?

    STEPHEN JONES:

    Look, I think the good thing about this is we’re seeing strong compliance. We put about $200 million into a tax compliance taskforce focusing on large businesses and multinationals, and I’m very pleased to see that it’s reaping rewards. Australians want to ensure that whether you’re a big business or a small business, you’re paying your fair share. So, pleased to see that in the numbers today that we’re getting strong revenue coming through. Of course, it’s what pays for Medicare, it’s what pays for defence, it’s what pays for all the services that Australians expect us to deliver for them.

    CLARKE:

    How can we quantify, though, how much of that increased corporate tax revenue for the government is coming because of the tax crackdown, to make sure that they’re not profit shifting or avoiding, how much is due to that compared to just some companies in particular – we know a lot of our large mining companies have just had a really good year of sales.

    JONES:

    Well, frankly, from a bottom line point of view, it doesn’t matter that much. We want to ensure that as we continue to try and balance the budgets. Delivering 2 strong budgets in our first 2 terms of office means that we can do more, and ensuring that we’re getting every dollar that is owed through the taxation system is a key part of that strategy. Australians expect the Albanese government to do that. So, a bit of this, a bit of that, a bit of strong revenue coming through from those traditional sectors like resources and banking and financial services, but also knowing that we’ve got a strong compliance effort going on there as well, to ensure that we’re getting every dollar that is owed to the Australian people.

    CLARKE:

    There’s still something like 1,200 large companies not paying any tax at all. Is that acceptable? Can the crackdown on tax avoidance reach those companies that are not just, you know, rightly perhaps for some of them, not recording paying tax this time of year due to losses or various, various reasons they might not, but likely some of them are still finding ways to move their profits elsewhere.

    JONES:

    If it’s avoidance that’s going on, then it’s not acceptable and we’ll track it down. We’re putting a lot of effort into ensuring that we’re cracking down on tax avoidance, particularly in the area of multinational tax avoidance, working through multilateral organisations, through the OECD, but also here at home, ensuring that we’re getting every dollar that is owed. Big priority for the government, huge priority for the government in that multinational area. And of course, as you say, there’ll be some of those businesses who aren’t paying tax because they’re not making any money, they’re breaking even or they’ve made a huge capital investment and any money they have made is being offset against the capital investments that they’ve made. So, some of that is signs of healthy economic activity, particularly if there’s been a big capital investment. We want that. It’s going to drive productivity, but if it’s avoidance, we’re onto it.

    CLARKE:

    Is it inevitable that there’ll be some level of avoidance so long as Australia has a corporate tax rate of 30 per cent? Is there any value in looking at a lower corporate tax rate in the hope that it might mean there is less accounting shuffling done, and that could actually lead to a better outcome? Or are you convinced the 30 per cent tax rate is the right one to remain at?

    JONES:

    Look, a couple of things to say about that. It’s 30 per cent, that’s the headline rate. But of course, there are a whole range of offsets and allowances that are made, which means the actual rate, the underlying rate, is significantly less than that for most businesses and have used, as you’ve just pointed out, a whole heap of businesses, one‑third of them in today’s report, that aren’t paying any corporate tax at all. So, that’s the first point I’d make. The second point I’d make is Australians expect our businesses, particularly our resources businesses, our banking businesses and the multinational organisations, to be paying their fair share. And if we want to be able to continue to balance our budgets, we’ve got to ensure that whether you’re an individual taxpayer or a corporate taxpayer, you’re paying your fair share.

    CLARKE:

    The Australian Financial Complaints Authority has been reporting of the number of complaints that it is dealing with, and it’s dealing with an order of 900 complaints about scams every month. But it is reporting that does seem to be going down slightly. Why do you think that is?

    JONES:

    Look a sign of success, I’ve got to say. You would be aware, Melissa, that the government’s put a big emphasis on reducing scams and preventing scams. Phase one involved standing up a National Anti‑Scam Centre and pulling down fake investment websites. We’re blocking about a million calls and messages a day, which is a significant uplift in our effort. More legislation coming into parliament in a fortnight to uplift our effort here. So, our strategy is working. There’s no other country in the world that can say they’re having the success that Australia is having, which is why people are now starting to talk about the Australian model for scam prevention. That’s all great, but it doesn’t mean we can rest on our laurels because as soon as we do, the scammers come back, losses go up again and that’s not good enough.

    CLARKE:

    Is this a sign that this is an area that really does need strong government intervention, that the financial institutions can’t be relied upon to do the right thing, to make sure that customers are as protected as they can be and that a government has to step in here?

    JONES:

    Yeah, look, 100 per cent. You know, the approach of our predecessors on this was that if you get scammed out of money, you’re a mug and you’re on your own basically. It was a private problem, not a public problem. We think that’s wrong because scams have been industrialised, but they’ve also, if you don’t get on top of it, people won’t answer phone calls that they don’t recognise, they won’t respond to emails because they think it’s a fraud. They won’t respond to SMS messages because they think they’re bogus. Whether you care about it from the social aspect, which I do, or you understand that it’s actually undermining the rails of modern commerce unless we get on top of it, you should have 2 strong motivations for wanting to do it. And that’s the approach of the Albanese government. This is a public problem, not a private problem and we’ve got to get on top of it. So, we’re really leaning, it is a priority for us. We are leaning into it. We want to ensure that we are the hardest country on earth for a criminal to make a buck through scams.

    CLARKE:

    Well, it’s interesting then to look at some of the other findings of the last financial year from the Financial Complaints Authority, because they also note that complaints about financial institutions dealing with hardship has gone up, and it also is quite critical of a number of insurance companies saying they’re not taking enough of a resolution mindset, that it’s still too adversarial and not doing enough to resolve complaints that people have about those services. Does that then suggest that maybe this is requiring more government intervention with banks and insurers to put more pressure on them to resolve complaints earlier in the process?

    JONES:

    Can I say, in the area of insurance, when somebody’s lost their property because there’s been a fire or a flood or some other tragedy, the last thing they need is to have to be involved in a brawl and a dragged out fight with their insurance company. Prompt payment, prompt resolution, prompt clarification of rights is what is needed. And it’s exactly why I got Dr Daniel Mulino to chair the recent inquiry into insurance claims handling, particularly arising out of the NSW and Queensland floods recently. He’s done a great job. A series of recommendations to both government and industry. We’re going through them now. An excellent report, and you’ll see us implementing a lot of those recommendations as soon as possible. Like, the insurance industry doesn’t have to wait. The message to them is get better. We want to ensure that you’re looking after your customers, and they’re not adding insult to injury after they’ve had their properties wiped out through a flood.

    CLARKE:

    And look, before we let you go, I do want to ask you about the issue that has taken up much time in Canberra this week, of politicians accepting flight upgrades or access to the Chairman’s Lounge from Qantas. Given the risk of the perception of a conflict that this creates, do we need our politicians, yourself included, to perhaps rethink whether or not they should be accepting flight upgrades or a Chairman’s Lounge? Is the declaration process not enough to allay public concern that it might be influencing policy decisions?

    JONES:

    Look, I don’t think it does. Can I first start by saying I don’t think it does influence policy decisions, I’ve read all the stuff, and I’ve watched all the stuff over the last week, and, you know, there’s a lot of strong words that have been said about it. I’m certain that it doesn’t influence policy decisions. You know, should politicians be banned from, you know, upgrades or Qantas lounge? Frankly, I don’t care one way or the other. It’s not a big deal to me. But, yeah, I think Australians are actually focused on, is Medicare working properly? How’s cost of living? Is my job secure? Am I getting a pay rise? Frankly, they’re the issues. I know it’s fascinating in Canberra, and I know there’s a lot of tit‑for‑tat stuff going on here, but I think Australians are really in a different place.

    CLARKE:

    I know you say that you don’t believe that it creates any influence on policy decisions, but it can create the perception that there could be, and we know that that’s important when it comes to transparency and accountability. So, given the perception issue and given that we have had things like the decision to not grant Qatar extra, you know, slots coming into major airports, which, you know, at the time you said was to help keep Qantas viable and competitive, would there not be some value in reassessing that issue of perception that might remain even if the policy influence isn’t affected?

    JONES:

    You know, I think we’ve got to continually assess these things to ensure that we are keeping pace with community expectations. I actually don’t think it makes a difference. Both Qantas and Virgin have the same sorts of lounges. I think Rex does as well. Like, I don’t think it’s exceptional. When I’ve been into any of them, you’ll see sports people, you’ll see business people. Yes. You’ll see politicians, you know, so there’s – frankly, I don’t think it changes the way people make a decision either way. All of the airlines have these facilities available to them, so it’s not like people are making a pro‑Qantas or an anti‑Qantas decision, depending on which door they walk through. I just don’t think that happens. But I do accept your point, frankly, around perceptions, I’m not sure where it ends. But I do accept your point that, you know, that we’ve got to ensure that we’re continually reviewing behaviours and arrangements to keep place with community norms.

    CLARKE:

    Alright. Something I think we’ll keep assessing and perhaps perpetually keep assessing. Stephen Jones, thanks very much.

    JONES:

    Good to be with you.

    MIL OSI News

  • MIL-OSI Australia: King Creek Bridge opening rounds out $20 million replacement program

    Source: Australian Ministers for Regional Development

    The Australian and New South Wales governments continue to partner with local governments across the state to get high-priority road and community infrastructure off the ground.

    As part of this, the King Creek Bridge in the Port Macquarie Hastings has been replaced to boost road safety and connectivity.

    The project puts the finishing touches on close to $20 million worth of bridge infrastructure upgrades across the region that were jointly funded by the Australian and NSW governments and Port Macquarie Hastings Council (PMHC).

    These upgrades have seen 13 ageing timber bridges replaced with brand-new modern concrete structures over the past two years.

    The bridges were funded thanks to the NSW Government’s Fixing Country Bridges Program, PMHC and the Australian Government’s Safer Local Roads and Infrastructure Program.

    This involved over $18.7 million from the NSW Government, $385,000 from the Australian Government and $500,000 from PMHC.

    The Australian Government’s contribution funded the Old School Road Bridge replacement at Herons Creek ($160,000) and Donkins Flat Bridge replacement on Wingham Road at Comboyne ($225,000).

    PMHC engaged both EIRE Constructions and Saunders Civilbuild to replace the bridges, which now meet modern Australian Standards.

    The new concrete structures, including nine bridges and four culverts, are available to view here.

    From July 1 2024, the former Bridges Renewal Program merged into the Australian Government’s new Safer Local Roads and Infrastructure Program – with increased funding available to support state, territory, and local governments to address current and emerging priorities in road infrastructure needs.

    Quotes attributable to Minister for Regional Development, Local Government and Territories, the Hon Kristy McBain MP:

    “The Australian Government understands the critical importance of regional bridges to keeping communities safely and reliably connected, including during flood events.

    “That’s why we’ve invested $385,000 towards two bridge upgrades around Port Macquarie, as part of our commitment to partner with the NSW and local governments to kickstart priority projects that will have a lasting impact in communities.”

    Quotes attributable to NSW Minister for Regional Roads and Transport, the Hon Jenny Aitchison MP:

    “These new bridges are enhancing connectivity and support the growing needs of our regional communities.

    “The Minns Labor Government is delighted to have provided the lion’s share of funding to Port Macquarie Hastings Council to deliver these new bridges.

    “The $18.7 million investment by the NSW Government will improve safety on local roads in Port Macquarie and allow for more reliable and efficient transport links for country communities.”

    Quotes attributable to Port Macquarie Mayor, Cr Adam Roberts:

    “The completion of King Creek Bridge marks a significant milestone in the ongoing investment and delivery of improved road and transport infrastructure for our community.

    “Keeping our community connected and providing safe, reliable and secure infrastructure was one of the key cornerstones of the Fixing Country Bridges Program.

    “Not only that, but these new bridges will also provide greater resistance to flood damage and flooding inundation.

    “I want to thank both the NSW and Australian governments for their support of this program, our contracted construction companies for their timely delivery and impacted communities for the patience shown during the program delivery.”

    MIL OSI News

  • MIL-OSI Economics: Q&A: Exploring the Key Findings of the Georgia PPP Monitor

    Source: Asia Development Bank

    Article | 04 November 2024
    Read time: 5 mins

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    The Asian Development Bank (ADB) recently launched the Georgia Public–Private Partnership (PPP) Monitor. Helen Steward, Principal Markets Development Advisory Specialist in ADB’s Office of Markets Development and Public–Private Partnerships (OMDP), explains what the PPP Monitor is all about.

    What are Public–Private Partnerships or PPPs?

    Public–private partnerships are contractual arrangements where a government partners with the private sector to build and manage public infrastructure, such as roads and highways, renewable energy plants, hospitals, and schools. PPPs may also be used by government to bring in private sector to manage existing public infrastructure more efficiently.

    Helen Steward, Principal Markets Development Advisory Specialist, Office of Markets Development and Public–Private Partnerships (OMDP), ADB

    What is the PPP Monitor?

    The PPP Monitor is a publication series of ADB. It profiles PPP-enabling environments in ADB’s developing member countries (DMCs) across Asia and the Pacific. The PPP Monitor features a data-driven, online version that allows users to compare the key PPP parameters and attributes across the featured DMCs.

    Who can use the PPP Monitor?

    The PPP Monitor provides the investor community with business intelligence on the enabling environment, policies, priority sectors, and deals to facilitate informed investment decisions. 
    For ADB DMCs the PPP Monitor serves as a diagnostic tool to identify gaps in their legal, regulatory, and institutional frameworks.

    ADB and other international development agencies can also benefit from the PPP Monitor as it could be useful in initiating dialogues to assess a country’s readiness to implement PPPs to develop and sustain its infrastructure.

    What are the key takeaways from the Georgia PPP Monitor?

    • Georgia has a nascent but developing ecosystem for PPPs.
    • ADB has been involved in developing the PPP program in Georgia for many years by facilitating the establishment of the PPP legal framework in the country.
    • The government realized the importance of PPPs as an alternative way of financing infrastructure investments and has been developing a PPP institutional, policy, and legal and regulatory framework.
    • In 2018, the Law of Georgia on Public–Private Partnerships, also known as the PPP Law, was adopted. This was followed by a package of bylaws related to the introduction and implementation of PPPs in Georgia.
    • The PPP Law and the secondary legislation provide the legal basis for procuring and managing PPPs in Georgia. It covers both concession and non-concession types of PPPs. It provides the definition and eligibility criteria for PPPs, the various stages for project development and management, and the relevant entities involved in PPP project identification, screening, preparation, procurement, and management, including their functions. It also establishes the process for dispute resolution and the identification and management of contingent liabilities.
    • The PPP Law and the secondary legislation also require the establishment of a formal PPP institutional structure including a PPP Agency, which has been set up under the Office of the Prime Minister of Georgia, and a related risk and fiscal management function under the Ministry of Finance. The PPP Agency became operational in 2019 and guidelines for identifying, appraising, procuring, implementing, and monitoring PPPs have been developed to support the PPP Law and the supporting secondary legislation.

    How many PPPs have been developed in Georgia?

    From 1990 to 2023, about 42 PPP projects from different sectors (e.g., airports, energy, information and communications technology, water and sewerage, and social infrastructure) successfully achieved financial closure. The total investment made in these projects is approximately $4 billion.

    According to the PPP Agency, since the adoption of the PPP Law in 2018, only a few new PPPs have been initiated and reached financial closure and these have all been in the energy sector.

    What challenges exist in the public private partnership landscape?

    Significant progress has been made in improving the PPP landscape, especially in establishing the regulatory framework and with recent PPP training programs instigated by the PPP Agency. However, there is so far only a limited pipeline of viable projects and significant challenges remain to be addressed, including low awareness of PPPs; limited capacity of government officials; lack of PPP initiatives at the local and national levels; and lack of a project development fund, among others.

    What is ADB doing to support PPPs in Georgia?

    Having supported the drafting of the PPP legislation, implementing guidelines, model concession agreements, and annual fiscal risk statements, ADB is poised to support PPP development further in Georgia. PPPs offer an avenue to improve value for money in infrastructure development and service delivery. However, the current capacity of the public sector to drive and implement PPPs is constrained. ADB has been working in partnership with the PPP Agency to address some of the challenges. ADB is helping raise awareness about PPPs through events. Earlier in October, ADB held a specialist training course on PPPs for senior government officials to help address the capacity gaps and contribute toward building a pipeline of projects. ADB is also undertaking a feasibility assessment on affordable housing to explore PPP opportunities and is also in early discussion with various government agencies to help screen and prepare potential pilot PPP projects. 

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    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-OSI China: Expanding charging options power NEVs for Spring Festival travel rush

    Source: People’s Republic of China – State Council News

    BEIJING, Jan. 25 — China’s highway network is now brimming with charging options. Alongside regular charging stations, new supercharging hubs, mobile charging piles and remotely operated mobile charging vehicles are making it easier than ever for new energy vehicles (NEVs) to hit the road this Spring Festival.

    Wang Qiang, based in Hangzhou, Zhejiang Province, recently made the long drive home to Wanqiao Village, Chongqing Municipality, in his electric car.

    He was quite surprised by the new supercharging station in the village. With a power output capacity of 480 kilowatts, it can charge his car fully in just 10 minutes.

    “For the first time, I drove my electric car home for Spring Festival celebrations. To my surprise, a charging station was built right near my home, so I no longer have to take the long detour downtown to charge,” Wang said.

    As the Spring Festival (Chinese New Year) draws near, an unprecedented 9 billion inter-regional trips are expected during this year’s chunyun, or 40-day Spring Festival travel rush. And many like Wang have chosen to drive their cars, including NEVs, which are gaining popularity in the country.

    By the end of 2024, there were 31.4 million NEVs in China, accounting for 8.9 percent of the country’s vehicles. Last year alone, 11.25 million NEVs were registered, accounting for 41.83 percent of all new vehicle registrations and representing a growth rate of 51.49 percent compared to 2023.

    To cope with the surging demand for NEV charging, the National Energy Administration (NEA) will guide charging operators to enhance the maintenance of charging facilities and improve service quality, ensuring that operators provide safe, reliable, standardized and efficient services in an orderly manner, NEA spokesperson Zhang Xing said on Thursday.

    He added that by the end of 2024, a total of 35,000 charging piles had been installed in 98 percent of highway service areas across the country. The administration will continue to expand the coverage of charging facilities in urban and rural regions, on highways, and in residential communities.

    In Wang’s hometown of Chongqing, the municipal government introduced an action plan for NEV supercharging facilities in April 2024, aiming to build more than 2,000 supercharging stations by 2025.

    To meet the growing demand for NEV services during the Spring Festival, a State Grid branch company is operating supercharging stations in 83 highway service areas in Chongqing. It has also deployed more than 100 mobile charging piles in high-traffic areas, at popular tourist attractions, and within urban public charging stations across the municipality.

    Similar service-improvement measures are being implemented across the country. A charging station on a highway connecting Zhejiang Province with Jiangxi Province added 19 supercharging piles last Friday. During this Spring Festival holiday, the daily traffic on the highway is expected to exceed 95,000 vehicles.

    The new supercharging piles have a significant charging capacity, with a maximum output of 600 kilowatts per charge — 10 times that of conventional fast-charging piles. They can charge an NEV’s range at a rate of 1 kilometer per second, enabling NEVs to run for 400 kilometers after just an eight-minute charge. The new additions have made the station the largest highway supercharging station in Zhejiang, and it is now capable of charging 66 NEVs simultaneously.

    According to a State Grid branch company in Hangzhou, which operates the station, the total charging volume of 45 highway charging stations in Hangzhou increased 71.81 percent year on year in 2024, reaching 20.28 million kilowatt-hours.

    In Beijing, charging operators provide services in expressway service areas and transportation hubs, and at large shopping malls, major tourist attractions, and ice-and-snow cultural tourism venues. A State Grid branch company in the city has, for example, built a total of 108 charging stations with 1,833 charging piles.

    The company has also deployed remote-controlled mobile charging vehicles at highway charging stations. These charging vehicles can provide 60-kilowatt direct current fast-charging services like huge power banks, and are capable of increasing a NEV’s battery volume from 5 percent to roughly 50 percent in about 30 minutes.

    The mobile charging vehicles can be controlled to approach NEVs in need of charging. Once a charging vehicle approaches, an NEV driver can initiate the charging process by scanning a QR code on the charging vehicle.

    According to NEA statistics, there were 12.82 million NEV charging facilities in China by the end of 2024, a 49 percent year-on-year increase. The total charging volume of these facilities exceeded 110 billion kilowatt-hours last year, with a year-on-year growth rate of 38 percent.

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Trade and Investment Minister to hold trans-Tasman discussion

    Source: New Zealand Government

    Trade and Investment Minister Todd McClay will travel to Australia today for meetings with Australian Trade Minister, Senator Don Farrell, and the Australia New Zealand Leadership Forum (ANZLF). 

    Mr McClay recently hosted Minister Farrell in Rotorua for the annual Closer Economic Relations (CER) Trade Ministers’ meeting, where ANZLF presented on trans-Tasman business growth opportunities. 

    “Australia is our closest partner and is critical to our trade and investment performance,” Mr McClay says.

    “Minister Farrell and I will discuss opportunities to further grow trans-Tasman trade and investment, WTO developments, and ways to cooperate internationally. 

    “I will also raise with him the joint letter from New Zealand, Australian, and United States dairy sectors to our respective governments on Canada’s dairy policy which harms international dairy trade.”

    Australia is the current chair of New Zealand’s leading trade agreement – the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP). 

    “This will be an opportunity to explore ways to deepen CPTPP trade,” Mr McClay says. 

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-Evening Report: News Corp lies to Australian Parliament in lobbying putsch to change media laws

    Rupert Murdoch’s News Corporation has misled the Australian Parliament and is liable to prosecution — not that government will lift a finger to enforce the law, reports Michael West Media.

    SPECIAL REPORT: By Michael West

    Rupert Murdoch’s News Corporation has misled the Australian Parliament. In a submission to the Senate, the company claimed, “Foxtel also pays millions of dollars in income tax, GST and payroll tax, unlike many of our large international digital competitors”.

    However, an MWM investigation into the financial affairs of Foxtel has shown Foxtel was paying zero income tax when it told the Senate it was paying “millions”. The penalty for lying to the Senate is potential imprisonment, although “contempt of Parliament” laws are never enforced.

    The investigation found that NXE, the entity that controls Foxtel, paid no income tax in any of the five years from 2019 to 2023. During this time it generated $14 billion of total income.

    The total tax payable across this period is $0. The average total income is $2.8 billion per year.

    Foxtel Submission to the Senate Environment and Communications Legislation Committee Inquiry into The Broadcasting Legislation Amendment (2021 Measures No.1) Bill. Image: MWM screenshot

    Why did News Corporation mislead the Parliament? The plausible answers are in its Foxtel Submission to the Senate Environment and Communications Legislation Committee Inquiry into The Broadcasting Legislation Amendment.

    In May 2021 — which is also where the transgression occurred — the media executives for the American tycoon were lobbying a Parliamentary committee to change the laws in their favour.

    By this time, Netflix had leap-frogged Foxtel Pay TV subscriptions in Australia and Foxtel was complaining it had to spend too much money on producing local Australian content under the laws of the time. Also that Netflix paid almost no tax.

    Big-league tax dodger
    They were correct in this. Netflix, which is a big-league tax dodger itself, was by then making bucketloads of money in Australia but with zero local content requirements.

    Making television drama and so forth is expensive. It is far cheaper to pipe foreign content through your channels online. As Netflix does.

    The misleading of Parliament by corporations is rife, and contempt laws need to be enforced, as demonstrated routinely by the PwC inquiry last year. Corporations and their representatives routinely lie in their pursuit of corporate objectives.

    If democracy is to function better, the information provided to Parliament needs to be clarified, beyond doubt, as reliable. Former senator Rex Patrick has made the point in these pages.

    Even in this short statement to the committee of inquiry (published above), there are other misleading statements. Like many companies defending their failure to pay adequate income tax, Foxtel claims that it “paid millions” in GST and payroll tax.

    Companies don’t “pay” GST or payroll tax. They collect these taxes on behalf of governments.

    Little regard for laws
    Further to the contempt of Parliament, so little regard for the laws of Australia is shown by corporations that the local American boss of a small gas fracking company, Tamboran Resources, controlled by a US oil billionaire, didn’t even bother turning up to give evidence when asked.

    This despite being rewarded with millions in public grant money.

    Politicians need to muscle up, as Greens Senator Nick McKim did when grilling former Woolies boss Brad Banducci for prevaricating over providing evidence to the supermarket inquiry.

    Michael West established Michael West Media in 2016 to focus on journalism of high public interest, particularly the rising power of corporations over democracy. West was formerly a journalist and editor with Fairfax newspapers, a columnist for News Corp and even, once, a stockbroker. This article was first published by Michael West Media and is reopublished with permission.

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-OSI USA: Congressman Duarte Introduces the Border Security and Immigration Reform Act

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Representative John Duarte California (13th District)

    Congressman Duarte Introduces the Border Security and Immigration Reform Act

    Livingston, CA -, October 30, 2024

    Livingston, CA –This week, Congressman John Duarte (CA-13) announced the introduction of the Border Security and Immigration Reform Act. Joined by local elected officials, community members, and advocates, the event underscored the urgent need for comprehensive immigration reform and strengthened border security. The bill is the result of over two years of collaboration with Valley leaders from both parties, immigration roundtables, and town halls throughout the district. Congressman John Duarte announced his “1,000 Mayors”campaign to gain nationwide support and feedback from local elected officials

    “Families, workers, and communities throughout the Valley want real immigration solutions, not political grandstanding,” said Rep. Duarte. “This bill protects our immigrant communities and brings them out of the shadows, protects our communities against drug trafficking, and improves our Valley economy. I’m proud to work with my Democrat and Republican friends and local leaders to fix our immigration and border system.”

    To watch the full press conference,click here.

    Press Conference Speakers and Attendees:

    • Maria Pacheco, Kerman Mayor
    • Jose Moran, Livingston Mayor
    • Mike Clauzel, Patterson Mayor, Mike Clauzel’s wife Efigenia Clauzel
    • Javier Lopez, Ceres Mayor
    • Amy Bublak, Turlock Mayor
    • Paul Lanez, Los Banos Mayor
    • Mike Nelson, Atwater Mayor
    • Cece Gallegos, Madera Mayor Pro-Tem
    • Gurpal Samra, Livingston Mayor Pro-Tem
    • Lloyd Pariera, Merced County Supervisor
    • San Joaquin County Farm Bureau, President Les Strojan
    • Madera County Farm Bureau,Christina Beckstead
    • Rodrigo Espinosa, Merced County Supervisor

    Data on Immigration:

    • Ninety-six percent of Republicans and 80% of Democrats polled want stronger border security.
    • Seventy percent of Americans support legal pathways for high-skilled immigrants and international students.
    • The agricultural industry faces critical labor shortages, affecting the Valley’s economy and local farmers.
    • Most Americans support a path to legal status for eligible undocumented immigrants.

    Key Provisions of the Bill:

    • Enhanced Border Security: The bill allocates new resources and technology to complete the southern border wall and expand the Customs and Border Protection force, addressing drug trafficking and unauthorized entry. Note: This provision includes bill text from the Secure the Border Act of 2023 (H.R. 2).
    • Temporary Protected Status (TPS): Eligible individuals—including a permanent fix for Dreamers and Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, long-term Valley residents, and those with U.S. citizen spouses or children—can obtain TPS for five years while the government works to secure the border. Note: This bill builds on the Dignity Act, which Congressman Duarte has cosponsored since 2023.
    • Transition to Legal Status: TPS holders will transition to permanent status after five years, if the secure border is secured.
    • Agricultural Workforce Support: Establishes a “blue card” system to protect undocumented agriculture workers and allow them to return to the U.S. if they travel back to their country of origin.
    • To read more about the Border Security and Immigration Reform Act, click here.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Secretary-General’s message on the International Day to End Impunity for Crimes Against Journalists [scroll down for French version]

    Source: United Nations secretary general

    On this International Day to End Impunity for Crimes against Journalists, we reaffirm our commitment to press freedom and the safety of journalists worldwide.

    A free press is fundamental to human rights, democracy, and the rule of law. Yet journalists around the world are prevented from doing their job and often face threats, violence, and even death in their mission to bring truth to light and hold the powerful to account. 

    Recent years have seen an alarming rate of fatalities in conflict zones – in particular in Gaza, which has seen the highest number of killings of journalists and media workers in any war in decades.

    Worldwide, an estimated 9 out of 10 of journalist murders go unpunished. Impunity breeds further violence. This must change. 

    The Pact for the Future adopted last month calls for respecting and protecting journalists, media professionals and associated personnel working in situations of armed conflict.

    I call on governments to bring these commitments to life by taking urgent steps to protect journalists, investigate crimes against them, and prosecute perpetrators – everywhere.

    Together, let’s end the cycle of violence, uphold freedom of expression, and ensure that journalists can carry out their essential work safely and without fear – everywhere. 

    *****
    La Journée internationale de la fin de l’impunité pour les crimes commis contre des journalistes est l’occasion de réaffirmer notre engagement en faveur de la liberté de la presse et de la sécurité des journalistes dans le monde entier.

    La liberté de la presse est une condition indispensable des droits humains, de la démocratie et de l’état de droit. Pourtant, dans le monde entier, des journalistes sont empêchés de faire leur travail ; ils sont souvent la cible de menaces ou de violences et risquent même la mort dans la mission qui est la leur de faire éclater la vérité et de mettre les puissants devant leurs responsabilités.

    Ces dernières années, le nombre de morts a atteint un niveau alarmant dans les zones de conflit – en particulier à Gaza, où le nombre de journalistes et professionnels des médias tués dépasse tout autre conflit depuis des décennies.

    Dans le monde, on estime que 9 meurtres de journalistes sur 10 restent impunis. L’impunité engendre de nouvelles violences. Cela doit changer.

    Le Pacte pour l’avenir adopté le mois dernier appelle au respect et à la protection des journalistes, des professionnels des médias et des membres du personnel associé qui travaillent dans des situations de conflit armé.

    Je demande aux gouvernements de concrétiser ces engagements en prenant sans délai des mesures pour protéger les journalistes, enquêter sur les crimes qui les visent et en poursuivre les auteurs – partout dans le monde.

    Ensemble, mettons fin au cycle de la violence, défendons la liberté d’expression et veillons à ce que les journalistes puissent mener à bien leur mission essentielle en toute sécurité et sans crainte – partout dans le monde.
     

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI Canada: Manitoba Government Announces New Funding to Enhance Community Safety in Dauphin

    Source: Government of Canada regional news

    Manitoba Government Announces New Funding to Enhance Community Safety in Dauphin

    – – –
    Criminal Property Forfeiture Fund Supports Additional CCTV Cameras: Wiebe


    The Manitoba government, in partnership with the Royal Canadian Mounted Police and Manitoba Association of Chiefs of Police, is assisting the City of Dauphin in addressing crime by using funds from the Criminal Property Forfeiture Fund to help install 15 additional CCTV cameras, Justice Minister Matt Wiebe announced today.

    “Every Manitoban deserves to feel safe in their community and our government is tackling crime as well as the root causes of crime,” said Wiebe. “The Criminal Property Forfeiture Act has been an invaluable tool to support local efforts to fight crime and continues to make a difference in the lives of Manitobans who are victims of crime. This program is a win-win. We can make communities safer while making drug traffickers and organized crime pay the price.”

    Approximately $24,000 from the fund will support the installation of 15 new high-resolution cameras at additional city-owned or city-affiliated facilities in Dauphin, the minister noted. This builds on previous initiative to upgrade seven existing cameras to high-resolution and adding 10 high-resolution cameras on city-owned property.

    “We are grateful for the continued support from the Manitoba government through the Criminal Property Forfeiture Fund,” said Mayor David Bosiak, City of Dauphin. “These additional CCTV cameras will strengthen our efforts to enhance public safety in Dauphin, providing valuable tools for crime prevention and for protection for city-owned facilities. This investment not only helps deter crime but also promotes a greater sense of security for our residents. We are proud to partner with the Manitoba government to make Dauphin a safer place for everyone.”

    Since its inception in 2009, the Criminal Property Forfeiture Branch has disbursed more than $30 million to promote safer communities throughout Manitoba. The program seizes and liquidates criminal assets and redirects funding to projects and initiatives designed to protect Manitobans and enhance public safety. The funds are provided to organizations across Manitoba whose important initiatives build community, prevent crime, invest in youth and support victims of crime.

    For more information about criminal property forfeiture, visit https://gov.mb.ca/justice/commsafe/cpf/index.html.

    – 30 –

    MIL OSI Canada News

  • MIL-OSI Africa: Secretary-General’s message on the International Day to End Impunity for Crimes Against Journalists [scroll down for French version]

    Source: United Nations – English

    n this International Day to End Impunity for Crimes against Journalists, we reaffirm our commitment to press freedom and the safety of journalists worldwide.

    A free press is fundamental to human rights, democracy, and the rule of law. Yet journalists around the world are prevented from doing their job and often face threats, violence, and even death in their mission to bring truth to light and hold the powerful to account. 

    Recent years have seen an alarming rate of fatalities in conflict zones – in particular in Gaza, which has seen the highest number of killings of journalists and media workers in any war in decades.

    Worldwide, an estimated 9 out of 10 of journalist murders go unpunished. Impunity breeds further violence. This must change. 

    The Pact for the Future adopted last month calls for respecting and protecting journalists, media professionals and associated personnel working in situations of armed conflict.

    I call on governments to bring these commitments to life by taking urgent steps to protect journalists, investigate crimes against them, and prosecute perpetrators – everywhere.

    Together, let’s end the cycle of violence, uphold freedom of expression, and ensure that journalists can carry out their essential work safely and without fear – everywhere. 

    *****
    La Journée internationale de la fin de l’impunité pour les crimes commis contre des journalistes est l’occasion de réaffirmer notre engagement en faveur de la liberté de la presse et de la sécurité des journalistes dans le monde entier.

    La liberté de la presse est une condition indispensable des droits humains, de la démocratie et de l’état de droit. Pourtant, dans le monde entier, des journalistes sont empêchés de faire leur travail ; ils sont souvent la cible de menaces ou de violences et risquent même la mort dans la mission qui est la leur de faire éclater la vérité et de mettre les puissants devant leurs responsabilités.

    Ces dernières années, le nombre de morts a atteint un niveau alarmant dans les zones de conflit – en particulier à Gaza, où le nombre de journalistes et professionnels des médias tués dépasse tout autre conflit depuis des décennies.

    Dans le monde, on estime que 9 meurtres de journalistes sur 10 restent impunis. L’impunité engendre de nouvelles violences. Cela doit changer.

    Le Pacte pour l’avenir adopté le mois dernier appelle au respect et à la protection des journalistes, des professionnels des médias et des membres du personnel associé qui travaillent dans des situations de conflit armé.

    Je demande aux gouvernements de concrétiser ces engagements en prenant sans délai des mesures pour protéger les journalistes, enquêter sur les crimes qui les visent et en poursuivre les auteurs – partout dans le monde.

    Ensemble, mettons fin au cycle de la violence, défendons la liberté d’expression et veillons à ce que les journalistes puissent mener à bien leur mission essentielle en toute sécurité et sans crainte – partout dans le monde.
     

    MIL OSI Africa

  • MIL-OSI Canada: Federal funding to help increase opportunities for women and build a more resilient economy for everyone in Canada

    Source: Government of Canada News (2)

    News release

    November 1, 2024 – Toronto, Ontario — Women and Gender Equality Canada

    Women continue to face persistent pay equity challenges, underrepresentation in high-paying jobs, a disproportionate load of caregiving responsibilities, and a lack of pathways for career growth. Unlocking economic and leadership opportunities for women will lead to a more prosperous and resilient economy for everyone in Canada.

    Today, the Honourable Marci Ien, Minister for Women and Gender Equality and Youth, announced up to $100 million for 163 projects to improve economic and leadership opportunities for women across Canada.

    This funding will address systemic barriers to women’s economic participation and success, including harassment, discrimination, limited access to mentors and networks, and lack of flexible work arrangements. The projects will advance gender equality through one or more of the following ways:

    • Changing gender norms and attitudes by working to change beliefs, assumptions, and stereotypes based on gender and other identity factors.
    • Supporting changes to authority, voices at the table, and decision-making power by working to address power imbalances to ensure women are part of the dialogue and solution.
    • Increasing networks and collaboration by building and strengthening partnerships to work across sectors and break down silos.
    • Encouraging more effective and equitable sharing of resources by sharing, mobilizing, and redistributing resources to support equality. 
    • Changing policies and practices by creating, changing, or removing policies and practices to address sexism and other barriers to gender equality.

    This funding supports Women and Gender Equality Canada’s continued work to advance equality with respect to sex, sexual orientation and gender identity or expression through the inclusion of people of all genders, including women, in Canada’s economic, social, and political life. 

    Quotes

    “Many women continue to face challenges that include balancing caregiving responsibilities, navigating pay inequities, and struggling to access leadership opportunities. These barriers disproportionately impact racialized and underrepresented communities. That is why this $100 million dollar investment to support 163 projects is creating mentorship opportunities, flexible work arrangements, and career pathways – which are all means to increase women’s economic participation. It is our government’s commitment to break through systemic barriers and reflect our belief that every woman deserves the chance to thrive and lead. When women have the opportunities they need to succeed; families and communities are stronger.”

    The Honourable Marci Ien, Minister for Women and Gender Equality and Youth

    “This funding is about unlocking potential—when women thrive, Canada thrives. Despite progress, too many women still face persistent pay gaps, barriers to leadership, and caregiving burdens that limit their opportunities. These projects will break down systemic barriers and build new pathways for women to grow, lead, and succeed. Together, we’re creating a more inclusive and prosperous future for everyone in Canada.”

    Lisa Hepfner, Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister for Women and Gender Equality and Youth

    “This announcement is a crucial step toward breaking down the barriers that continue to hold women back—from persistent pay gaps to underrepresentation in leadership and high-paying jobs. These projects will create real opportunities by supporting mentorship, flexible work arrangements, and inclusive career pathways. They will also challenge outdated norms and empower women to have a voice in decisions that shape our future. When women succeed, families, communities, and our entire country grow stronger and more resilient.”

    Julie Dzerowicz, Member of Parliament for Davenport

    Quick facts

    • Women’s wages have grown steadily since the 1990s, but disparities persist. In 2023, women in Canada earned 0.88 cents for every dollar earned by men, suggesting a gap of 12%. The pay gap is wider for: racialized, Indigenous and immigrant women.

    • Women occupy only 30% of senior management positions and just 35% of other management positions.

    • Women were majority owners of just 17% of small and medium-sized businesses in 2020.

    • Women’s labour force participation reached a record high of 85.7% in July 2023, however women are concentrated in low-wage occupations – 28.2% of women work in the five lowest paid occupations.

    Associated links

    Contacts

    Angie Rutera
    Communications Assistant
    Office of the Minister for Women and Gender Equality and Youth
    Angie.Rutera@fegc-wage.gc.ca

    Media Relations  
    Women and Gender Equality Canada  
    819-420-6530  
    FEGC.Media.WAGE@fegc-wage.gc.ca

    Follow Women and Gender Equality Canada:  

    MIL OSI Canada News

  • MIL-OSI Canada: Minister Valdez wraps up activities to celebrate Small Business Month and highlights government supports for entrepreneurs

    Source: Government of Canada News (2)

    News release

    November 1, 2024 – Ottawa, Ontario

    The Honourable Rechie Valdez, Minister of Small Business, celebrated Small Business Month (SBM) by meeting with local entrepreneurs and business organizations to highlight the federal government supports that are available to help them thrive.

    Minister Valdez kicked off October by announcing that the federal government has negotiated lower credit card interchange fees by up to 27% for small businesses across Canada. These lower fees for Visa and Mastercard took effect on October 19, 2024. Minister Valdez also announced that the Canada Carbon Rebate will be distributing $2.5 billion to about 600,000 small and medium-sized businesses across Canada where the federal fuel charge applies. The amount is dependent on a business’ number of employees. For example, Ontarian small businesses will receive $401 per employee. Small and medium-sized businesses that filed their taxes before July 15 will receive an automatic payment by the end of this year.

    Throughout SBM, Minister Valdez met with small business owners across the country. She also engaged with diverse groups of entrepreneurs at the Mississauga Board of Trade, the CanadianSME Magazine Small Business Summit, the Casa Foundation for International Development’s Friends of Africa summit, the Elevate Festival, the Alliance of Nigerian Entrepreneurs gathering, the RPA Women Entrepreneur Awards Gala, the Federation of African Canadian Economics’ Small Business Sunday event, the Toronto Small Business Forum, and the Misfit Ventures Misfits Unleashed event.

    During these engagements, Minister Valdez highlighted the federal government’s groundbreaking investments—through programs like the 2SLGBTQI+ Entrepreneurship Program, the Women Entrepreneurship Strategy and the Black Entrepreneurship Program—that are helping fight the systemic barriers under-represented entrepreneurs face. She also spotlighted federal government investments in inclusive venture capital and Futurpreneur, as well as support for Indigenous entrepreneurs.

    Minister Valdez also updated entrepreneurs on federal investments to help small businesses adopt digital tools and innovations, including the $2.4 billion committed in Budget 2024 to secure Canada’s artificial intelligence (AI) advantage. This includes $200 million in the Regional Artificial Intelligence Initiative, which will help bring new AI technologies to market and accelerate AI adoption by small businesses across the country. She also mentioned the Canada Digital Adoption Program, which has helped more than 60,000 small businesses improve their digital capabilities and adopt e-commerce platforms.

    The Minister wrapped up her SBM-related activities on October 30 by announcing a new partnership between the First Nations Health Authority and the CAN Health Network that will help over 200 First Nations communities across British Columbia access health care innovations from Canadian start-ups. Start-ups in the health care sector have expressed that they face unique challenges breaking into the new market and increasing uptake of their technologies. The federal government’s investment in the CAN Health Network is connecting innovative health care providers with promising start-ups that are offering made-in-Canada solutions to meet their unique needs and challenges.

    Quotes

    “Small businesses are the heart of our communities and the backbone of our economy, employing nearly 8 million hard-working Canadians. It was incredible to spend Small Business Month celebrating their invaluable contributions and meeting key organizations that are dedicated to helping entrepreneurs thrive. Our government will continue to have the backs of small businesses from coast to coast to coast, whether they’re just starting out, looking to grow or striving to extend their reach into new markets.”
    – The Honourable Rechie Valdez, Minister of Small Business 

    Quick facts

    • The Canada Carbon Rebate for Small Businesses is a refundable tax credit to return a portion of federal fuel charge proceeds directly to eligible businesses.

      • Businesses will not have to apply for this rebate. The Canada Revenue Agency will determine and automatically issue the rebate amounts for eligible businesses based on the payment rates of each applicable province for the corresponding fuel charge years, as specified by the Minister of Finance.
      • The rebate will be available to eligible Canadian-controlled private corporations that had 499 or fewer employees in Canada throughout the calendar year in which the applicable fuel charge year began.
      • The federal fuel charge currently applies in the provinces of Alberta, Manitoba, New Brunswick, Newfoundland and Labrador, Nova Scotia, Ontario, Prince Edward Island and Saskatchewan. The Government of Canada does not keep any direct proceeds from pollution pricing. All direct fuel charge proceeds are returned in the province or territory of origin.
    • The Code of Conduct for the Payment Card Industry in Canada was first released in 2010 and was last updated in 2015.

      • All major payment card network operators in Canada incorporate the code into their rules, making it binding on all their network participants: issuers, acquirers and payment processors.
      • More than 1 million businesses that accept payment cards in Canada will benefit from the code revisions. In 2023, these businesses accepted approximately 14.1 billion card payments worth $1.2 trillion.
      • The increased transparency and disclosure elements of the revised code require payment processors to notify eligible businesses if network fee reductions will not be passed on in full. Additionally, payment processors must remind those businesses of their right to terminate their contract, enabling them to switch to a processor that passes on the benefits of rate reductions.
      • Under the existing code, businesses have the right to exit their contracts without penalty if they do not receive the full benefits of certain network fee decreases, such as the upcoming small business interchange reductions. But businesses have not always been aware of this right.
    • Businesses pay fees to process credit card transactions, with the largest component being the interchange fee paid to credit card–issuing financial institutions, such as banks. The federal government has finalized agreements to lower these fees for small businesses starting on October 19, 2024. Visa and Mastercard have agreed to:

      • reduce domestic consumer credit interchange fees for in-store transactions to an annual weighted average interchange rate of 0.95%
      • reduce domestic consumer credit interchange fees for online transactions by 10 basis points, resulting in reductions of up to 7%
      • provide free access to online fraud and cybersecurity resources to help small businesses grow their online sales while preventing fraud and chargebacks
      • allow small businesses to qualify with each credit card network individually
    • Small businesses with an annual Visa sales volume below $300,000 will qualify for the lower interchange fees from Visa, and those with an annual Mastercard sales volume below $175,000 will qualify for the lower fees from Mastercard.

    • Non-profit organizations with transaction volumes below these thresholds will also benefit from reduced rates.

    Contacts

    Callie Franson
    Senior Communications Advisor and Issues Manager
    Office of the Minister of Small Business
    callie.franson@ised-isde.gc.ca

    Media Relations
    Innovation, Science and Economic Development Canada
    media@ised-isde.gc.ca

    Stay connected

    Follow Canada Business on social media.
    X (Twitter): @canadabusiness | Facebook: Canada Business | Instagram: @cdnbusiness

    For easy access to government programs for businesses, download the Canada Business app.

    MIL OSI Canada News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Connolly Leads Request to Tech Executives To Disclose Measures to Prevent Political Violence Following Election

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Representative Gerry Connolly (D-Va)

    Congressman Gerry Connolly (D-VA), the Ranking Member of the House Subcommittee on Cybersecurity, Information Technology, and Government Innovation, sent a letter to executives at Meta, X Corp, TikTok, Instagram, YouTube, and Snap requesting information on how they plan to ensure their platforms are not used to spread violence or threaten public safety in the months following Tuesday’s election. Connolly was joined by Reps. Casten, Trahan and Shontel Brown.

    “The United States faces increased risk of political violence as the 2024 presidential election approaches. Given this threat, it is essential that social media platforms disclose the measures they have in place to prevent their services from being exploited to threaten public safety in the days, weeks, and months following November 5th. Transparency and accountability in this effort are critical to ensuring the integrity of our electoral process and keeping the American people safe,” the members wrote.

    In their letter, the members noted we are living in a time of heightened political violence. Just this year, two attempts were made on the life of former President Donald Trump. Meanwhile, violence against elected officials has escalated, including an assault on former Speaker Pelosi’s husband in 2022. In 2023, the U.S. Capitol Police opened more than 8,000 threat investigations, a sharp rise from 902 in 2016. This disturbing trend follows other tragic events, such as the violence perpetrated by white supremacists in Charlottesville in 2017. Many of the individuals involved in these attacks used social media to organize or were influenced by inflammatory content online.

    “While we recognize that sharing the finer details of emergency preparedness measures may carry some risks, we strongly believe that transparency with Congress, other platforms, and researchers is essential. In an era marked by escalating political violence, this level of accountability is necessary to ensure platforms are taking appropriate steps to safeguard public safety, uphold democratic integrity, and prevent the failures we have witnessed in the past,” the members added.

    They specifically asked the executives to respond to the following questions:

    Preparedness and Emergency Measures:

    Have you implemented, or do you plan to implement, “Break the Glass” or similar emergency measures during and in the follow-up to the 2024 election cycle?
    If such features have not been built, why not?
    Have these measures been built into various sub-products across your platform, such as search, recommendations, and other engagement tools?
    What criteria or indicators will trigger the deployment of these measures?
    What indicators or thresholds are used to determine when to implement these features?

    Learnings from Past Elections:

    Have you deployed similar safety features in other elections this year? If so, what lessons have informed your preparations for the U.S. election?
    How have your platforms addressed gaps identified during the January 6th attack?

    Transparency and Collaboration:

    How are you ensuring transparency around platform activity, particularly in light of the removal of tools like CrowdTangle and the decision to place access to X’s API behind a paywall?
    What steps are you taking to coordinate with other platforms and stakeholders to detect, mitigate, and de-escalate violent rhetoric effectively?

    Trust and Safety Capacity:

    In light of staffing reductions, what resources have been allocated to ensure that your platform is not exploited to facilitate political violence in the days, weeks, and months following the election?
    How will you ensure that algorithmic changes do not amplify harmful narratives during and after the election?

    The full letter is available here.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Governor Roy Cooper Proclaims November as American Indian Heritage Month

    Source: US State of North Carolina

    Headline: Governor Roy Cooper Proclaims November as American Indian Heritage Month

    Governor Roy Cooper Proclaims November as American Indian Heritage Month
    mseets

    Governor Roy Cooper declared November as American Indian Heritage Month, celebrating the history, heritage and contributions of North Carolina’s eight state recognized tribes including the Coharie, Eastern Band of Cherokee, Haliwa-Saponi, Lumbee, Meherrin, Occaneechi Band of the Saponi Nation, Sappony and Waccamaw-Siouan. This month also honors our state’s four urban Indian organizations consisting of the Cumberland County Association for Indian People, Triangle Native American Society, and the Guilford, Metrolina Native American Associations.

    “This month, we take time to honor the culture and history of our American Indian tribes who have been here for generations,” said Governor Cooper. “We are grateful for their many contributions to our state and we look forward to continuing support for our indigenous communities.”

    This year’s theme, “NC United Tribes – 50 Years of Tribal Unity,” represents the inherit strength of North Carolina’s recognized tribes and Indian organizations and honors the more than 130,000 American Indians who call our state home. North Carolina has the second largest American Indian population east of the Mississippi River and the seventh largest American Indian population in the Unites States. In 2021, NC Department of Administration Secretary Pam Brewington Cashwell made history as the first American Indian woman to head a state cabinet agency in North Carolina.

    “It is an honor each year to not only celebrate the traditions and culture of American Indians but also to share our history and heritage with fellow North Carolinians,” said DOA Secretary Cashwell. “This month heightens our visibility in society to let communities know that we are still here as a people and as tribes united.”

    For more than 50 years, the NC Department of Administration’s Commission of Indian Affairs has served as a resource hub, providing information on housing, educational opportunities, scholarships, health care, and workforce development to American Indian communities. Established by the NC General Assembly in 1971, the Commission remains committed to providing local, state, and federal resources to support and advocate for North Carolina’s American Indian population.

    In celebration of American Indian Heritage Month, the NC Commission of Indian Affairs is again partnering with the NC Museum of History, NC American Indian Heritage Commission, as well as North Carolina American Indian tribes and urban American Indian organizations to coordinate a weekend of special events. The 29th Annual American Indian Heritage Celebration kicks off with a virtual Education Day on November 22 at 9 a.m. featuring storytelling and pottery among other activities. The November 23 celebration will be held in-person at the North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences and will include various demonstrations and performances highlighting the artistry, customs, and culture of North Carolina’s American Indian tribes. Both events are free and open to the public.

    To learn more about the upcoming American Indian Heritage Month Celebration visit the North Carolina Museum of History website.

    View a message from DOA Secretary Pamela B. Cashwell here.

    Read the proclamation here.

    About the NCDOA and the NC Commission of Indian Affairs

    The NC Department of Administration acts as the business manager for North Carolina state government. Under the leadership of Secretary Pamela B. Cashwell, the department oversees government operations and advocacy programs. The department’s advocacy programs help to promote and assist diverse segments of the state’s population that have been traditionally underserved. The NC Commission of Indian Affairs advocates for the rights of American Indian residents in North Carolina. It provides programs and services to American Indian communities across the state, including education and resources to aid in social and economic development. The Commission also works to promote unity among American Indian and non-Indian communities.

    ###

    Nov 1, 2024

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Strong Introduces Legislation to Expedite Deportation of Non-Citizen Voters

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Representative Dale Strong (Alabama)

    WASHINGTON— Today, Representative Dale W. Strong (R-AL) introduced the Deport Illegal Voters Act to expedite the removal of aliens convicted of voting illegally.  

    Specifically, the legislation adds unlawful voting to the defined list of aggravated felonies under the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA) and provides for the expedited deportation of convicted individuals. 

    “Anyone who is not an American citizen and casts a ballot in this election should be first in line to be deported. We must secure our elections and ensure participation in our elections is reserved for American citizens and American citizens only,” said Congressman Dale W. Strong.  

    Under the Biden-Harris Administration, we have seen record numbers of border crossings and illegal immigration into the United States. Additionally, there have been numerous cases of voter registration forms issued to non-citizens and numerous cases of non-citizen voting across the country, including Alabama. In September, the Department of Justice charged a Guatemalan national residing in Alabama with fraudulently using a U.S. identity to vote in multiple elections including the 2016 and 2020 presidential elections. This week, charges were filed against a Chinese national who cast a vote in the 2024 Presidential election in Michigan.  

    Interference in our elections undermines the rights of American citizens and sets a dangerous precedent that could further erode the trust and credibility of our electoral system. The integrity of our election system must be safeguarded to ensure only eligible and lawful voters are permitted to participate. 

    “People should stop and think twice before interfering in our elections. The Deport Illegal Voters Act sets a consequence fitting for those committing a federal offense,” said Strong.  

     

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Magaziner and Rep. Bennie Thompson Urge Federal Agencies to Take Action to Prevent Election Violence

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Representative Seth Magaziner (RI-02)

    WASHINGTON, D.C. — U.S. Representative Seth Magaziner (RI-02), Ranking Member for the Homeland Security Subcommittee on Counterterrorism, Intelligence and Law Enforcement, is partnering with Ranking Member for the Homeland Security Committee Bennie Thompson (MS-02) to lead 13 Members of Congress in raising concerns to the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and the Department of Justice (DOJ) about the potential for violence surrounding the 2024 election.

    “With the 2024 election coming up in a matter of days, we must take steps to ensure that the U.S. government is prepared to thwart violent attacks on the democratic process like that which occurred on January 6, 2021,” said Rep. Seth Magaziner (RI-02), Ranking Member for the Homeland Security Subcommittee on Counterterrorism, Intelligence and Law Enforcement. “Ranking Member Thompson and I are outlining a series of actions we believe the Department of Homeland Security and the Department of Justice should take to ensure a safe and secure election and peaceful transfer of power.”

    The Members of Congress outline important objectives that include, but are not limited to:

    • Ensuring that Federal agencies are aligned and attentive to the needs of election officials, and provide any requested assistance to state and local election officials.
    • Protecting state and local election offices from cyber attacks and providing them with services to defend election infrastructure.
    • Bolstering DHS’s efforts to raise awareness of the physical security services available to state and local officials through federal resources to protect election officials and infrastructure. 
    • Combating foreign influence campaigns by Russia and other malign actors, and combating election misinformation on social media platforms that seek to undermine the legitimacy of the election and trust in the American government.

    Donald Trump and his allies have been laying the groundwork to question the legitimacy of the 2024 election results, and have been spreading dangerous conspiracy theories about the vote counting process at the state and local levels. Trump has repeated lies of widespread voter fraud and suggested that the only way he can lose to Vice President Harris is if Democrats cheat. This is particularly concerning in light of a recent poll by the Associated Press that found two-thirds of Republicans polled trust Donald Trump and his campaign for accurate information about election results, but only 51 percent of Republicans polled would trust the government’s certification of election results.

    Trump has also declined to pledge to respect the outcome of the 2024 election and refused to publicly say that he would back a peaceful transfer of power. In 2020, Trump refused to acknowledge his election loss, spread lies about extensive voter fraud and incited a violent mob to attack the Capitol in an effort to overturn the results of a fair and secure election.

    Foreign malign influence operations also pose a threat to the 2024 election. The Justice Department recently disrupted a covert Russian government-sponsored foreign malign influence operation, which in part used AI-generated content and social media influencers, to spread disinformation about the 2024 election, sow discord and influence voters.

    Furthermore, threats against election officials have intensified. Nearly one in three election workers have reported being harassed, abused or threatened because of their job as a result of Trump’s rhetoric. This has caused high levels of turnover among election workers over concerns for their safety and the safety of their families, leading to increased strain on those responsible for facilitating our elections. 

    This letter builds upon Rep. Magaziner’s efforts to ensure a fair and secure election in 2024. This week, he joined his colleagues in urging the DOJ Election Threats Task Force to take stronger action in coordination with local law enforcement to protect election workers on and around Election Day.

    Rep. Magaziner also hosted a “Protecting our Democracy” roundtable with Rep. Thompson to bring attention to concerted efforts to question the legitimacy of the 2024 election results.

    Full text of the letter is below. A PDF copy of the letter is available HERE.


    Dear Secretary Mayorkas and Attorney General Garland:

    We understand that both the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and the Department of Justice (DoJ) have undertaken significant efforts to support the safe, secure administration of elections this November. We write to document those activities and to learn about any additional actions you will undertake between now and January 20, 2025, to ensure a peaceful transfer of power.

    Four years ago, State and local election officials across the country administered the most secure elections in history under exceptionally challenging circumstances. Nevertheless, confusion about voting and tabulation procedures, a politically polarized public, and a nationwide pandemic created a breeding ground for misinformation and conspiracy theories to flourish. As a result, a violent mob bent on preventing the peaceful transfer of power attempted to interrupt the certification of election results on January 6, 2021. Although the insurrection was ultimately unsuccessful, its legacy endures, notably though the targeting and harassment of election officials, baseless allegations that voter fraud will result in an illegitimate election result, and suggestions by public officials that they may not accept the election outcome.

    We applaud the efforts your agencies have already undertaken to support the safe, secure administration of elections, and encourage ongoing engagement with appropriate partners at the State and local levels in the weeks and months ahead.

    Coordination with State and Local Partners

    Election officials on the ground are the individuals who best understand the challenges of administering elections in today’s environment. It is important that Federal programs designed to secure elections are aligned to the needs of State and local election officials.

    • Attorney General Garland and Secretary Mayorkas, what processes are in place to receive feedback from election stakeholders to ensure your Departments are meeting the needs of election officials? How have your Departments incorporated stakeholder feedback into election security policies and programs? Please provide specific examples.
    • Attorney General Garland and Secretary Mayorkas, have resource constraints in any way limited the ability of your Departments to provide assistance requested by State and local election officials? If so, how?

    Last year, the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) announced it would establish dedicated election security advisors in each of the agency’s ten regions.

    • Secretary Mayorkas, how do election security advisors complement the work of existing cybersecurity and protective security advisors? Please provide details about the priorities of election security advisors and describe the specific activities they have undertaken to help state and local election officials prepare for the 2024 election.

    Election Cybersecurity

    CISA offers a range of no-cost cybersecurity services to election offices across the country, including cyber hygiene scans and risk and vulnerability assessments.

    • Secretary Mayorkas, please describe the services that DHS offers directly to State and local election officials and the efforts DHS has undertaken to promote these services. To what degree have State and local election offices adopted the services DHS offers? 
    • Secretary Mayorkas, DHS, through CISA, supports the Center for Internet Security, which houses Election Infrastructure Information Sharing and Analysis Center (EI-ISAC). The EI-ISAC provides State and local election officials with a range of additional services to defend election infrastructure from cyber attacks. Please describe the election security- related activities DHS funding supports at the EI-ISAC.
    • Secretary Mayorkas, how is the Department working with State and local election officials to ensure resilience in the event of a cyber incident on or near election day?

    As the Sector Risk Management Agency for the Election Infrastructure Subsector, DHS, through CISA, is responsible for engaging with a range of stakeholders involved in the administration of elections, including election technology and equipment vendors.

    • Secretary Mayorkas, please describe how the Department has worked with election technology and equipment vendors to improve security.

    Physical Security

    Recent swatting incidents and white powder mailings targeting election officials, along with disturbingly frequent social media threats, have highlighted the physical security threats facing election officials. Ensuring State and local officials are aware of the services available to them and have access to the resources necessary to improve their security will be critical to protecting election officials and infrastructure before, during, and after the election.

    • Secretary Mayorkas, please describe the physical security services DHS offers directly to State and local election officials and how DHS is increasing awareness of Federal resources available to protect the physical security of election infrastructure and officials. To what degree have State and local election officials utilized the physical security services DHS offers?
    • Attorney General Garland and Secretary Mayorkas, how are DOJ and DHS ensuring that they have relevant expertise on staff to support physical security services and outreach?
    • A security threat in one jurisdiction may suggest a heightened risk of similar situations in other jurisdictions. Attorney General Garland and Secretary Mayorkas, how are you ensuring that timely and actionable threat information based on recent incidents is shared with election officials nationally as threats emerge?
    • In the absence of Federal funding dedicated to improving the physical security of elections, State and local jurisdictions may struggle to implement security recommendations. Secretary Mayorkas, how is DHS supporting State and local election officials’ efforts to implement recommendations provided by CISA’s security assessments? How does CISA assist election officials in prioritizing cost-effective solutions to issues identified by the assessments?

    The January 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol demonstrated that election security risks do not end on Election Day. We are particularly concerned that similar violence could take place during the counting and certification of election results this cycle.

    • Attorney General Garland and Secretary Mayorkas, with a heightened risk of violence in the post-election period, what plans are in place to support election officials in the aftermath of the November election? What specific resources will be deployed following the election to support State and local election officials should threats develop?

    Mis- and Disinformation

    Public reporting indicates that foreign adversaries continue efforts to influence U.S. elections, and election misinformation has the potential to undermine the public’s confidence in election results and could fuel election-related violence. It is our understanding that the Federal government has modified its approach to combatting misinformation compared to the previous presidential election.

    • Attorney General Garland and Secretary Mayorkas, what are your current policies regarding engagements with social media companies on the threats posed by election- related misinformation? Please describe current activities related to combatting foreign influence and election misinformation.

    A recent poll by Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research and USAFact found that two-thirds of Republicans polled trust Donald Trump and his campaign for accurate information about election results, but only 51 percent of Republicans polled would trust the government’s certification of election results. Donald Trump has already begun to suggest the election will be rigged against him.

    • Attorney General Garland and Secretary Mayorkas, how will your Departments work to build confidence in the election outcome in the event a candidate, without evidence, attempts to call into question the legitimacy of the election outcome?

    Recent indictments by DOJ allege that Russian intelligence used American media influencers to unwittingly promote Russia’s foreign influence campaigns.

    • Attorney General Garland, does DOJ have policies in place to alert Americans who may be unwittingly amplifying illegal foreign influence campaigns?

    Many Republican officials have publicly claimed that non-citizens are voting in large numbers and could impact the outcome of the November election. The Texas Attorney General recently announced he was investigating whether organizations were purposefully registering non-citizens to vote, despite there being no indication that it is happening.

    • Attorney General Garland and Secretary Mayorkas, is there any evidence that non-citizens vote in large numbers in the United States? Is there any evidence that organizations are deliberately registering non-citizens to vote?

    Mis- and disinformation can lead to voter suppression. The Secretary of State of Alabama, for example, recently deactivated the registration of more than 3,000 people, including some naturalized citizens who must now update their records before they can vote. Some of them have expressed reluctance to register to vote again.

    • Attorney General Garland and Secretary Mayorkas, how are your Departments countering mis- and disinformation that may disproportionately affect naturalized citizens or target communities of color?

    Rapid advances in AI technological development have the potential to shift how foreign and domestic actors seek to shape public opinion and Federal efforts to secure elections must reflect the latest technological landscape.

    • Attorney General Garland and Secretary Mayorkas, what is your current assessment of the impact of AI-generated content in foreign influence campaigns and how are your Departments increasing awareness regarding the threat of AI-generated content in disinformation efforts?

    By and large, the most reliable sources of accurate election information are the official communications and websites of State and local election officials responsible for administering elections. The Federal government’s greater media visibility can play an important role in directing Americans to reliable sources of information and amplifying the voices of state and local officials.

    • Secretary Mayorkas, how is DHS amplifying efforts by State and local election officials to promote accurate election information and to respond to false rumors about the integrity, security, or accuracy of election systems and results? What are CISA’s plans to increase such communications closer to Election Day and following the election?

    Thank you for your attention to this letter. We look forward to your response and to continuing to work with you to ensure a safe, secure election next month.

    Sincerely,

    MIL OSI USA News